Feb 17, 2010

Buying eyeglasses for a lot less!

As a businesswoman who knows how incredibly important it is for all of us to find the best quality products for the best prices so that we can save some money for difficult financial periods, I am acknowledged enough to assure absolutely everyone that it is mandatory that we always search the Internet for anything that we may need.

Keeping this in mind, I have been recently looking for the best deals on quality eyeglasses and I came across this interesting article about Zenni Optical in which the author emphasis the high quality of the eyeglasses being sold at Zenni Optical but also states how we can make an incredible deal by ordering from Zenni Optical and paying less than 5 dollars for shipping no matter how many eyeglasses we buy from them. Moreover, by buying from Zenni Optical we will be able to buy eyeglasses for around 15 dollars which would cost over 100 dollars anywhere else! So, how can we possibly miss the opportunity of saving so much money by buying from Zenni Optical in a difficult financial period like this?

In conclusion, if you have always wanted to buy eyeglasses for all the family for the best price ever, then I am more than sure that you will be delighted as soon as you visit the website to which I have linked just above.

Airlines still trying to increase fares




Even considering the fact that you may have not noticed it yet, the truth is that most airlines are making a major effort in order to increase fares once again so that they can start recovering from the results of 2009 which were clearly bad for most of them. Read the msnbc.com article below and discover how they plan to increase those fares:

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NEW YORK - U.S. airlines' second attempt of 2010 to raise ticket prices has fizzled, with major carriers pulling back fares over the long holiday weekend, according to Farecompare.com.

Last week, UAL Corp's United Airlines increased fares by $10 per round-trip, and other top carriers followed suit. But by Monday afternoon, most airlines had rolled back their prices, Farecompare.com Chief Executive Rick Seaney said in an email.

"This is (the) second, relatively modest hike to fail this year," he wrote.

Low-cost carriers like Southwest Airlines did not raise fares, which may have hurt major airlines' ability to make the higher fares stick, said Morningstar analyst Basili Alukos.

"There's always a lot of competition," Alukos said. "You've got low-cost carriers preying on weaker legacy carriers to pick up (market) share. I'd attribute the failure of the price increase to that."

In the most recent round of quarterly reports, major airlines said they had seen greater demand, particularly from business travelers, who tend to pay higher prices.

Business traffic rose 1.7 percent in December 2009, the first month of year-over-year growth since May 2008, the International Air Transport Association said on Tuesday.

Still, IATA said evidence suggests some business travelers are increasingly traveling in economy seats, indicating recovery is still a ways off.

"We have to look for new ways to fly in a cost-effective manner," Alukos said of his own company's policy.

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