Seat selection, highbrow and low: Eos, Maxjet, Southwest
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Looking to choose the best seats on the plane?
SeatExpert now covers the two all-business class airlines. Seats are color-coded for good, bad, and so-so seating, but annotated comments are yet to come. See here for Eos, and here for Maxjet. (The odd shape of Eos’ seats on the map reflects their use of ottomans and privacy partitions in their seating units.)
Flying Southwest?
Savvy Southwest flyers have been checking in online 24 hours before their flight, to get that boarding pass in group A and assure themselves of early boarding. Many use automated check-in services that guarantee an A pass, since they’re cheap, or even free.
But legitimate “A” holders may be fighting for space with cheaters. Someone posted a method of hacking your boarding pass to change the B or C to an A. It’s astonishingly simple, and it’s frankly an embarrassment to Southwest that their boarding passes are so easily manipulated. (No, you can’t create a boarding pass willy-nilly and fly around the country for free… the barcode still contains the information about you and your itinerary.) A similar trick could be used to change the date and print yourself a boarding pass for security, if you wanted to accompany a friend to the gate. (It won’t let you on a plane.) This latter trick I have no problem with, since you’d just be using the boarding pass to enter security, not cheating your way into better seats.
I wonder how long it will take before the company changes the HTML of the passes to prevent this sort of hack. When 137 people line up with “A” passes, with no one in “B” or “C”? Start the clock. (Via digg, thanks to reader BJ!)
(images: Maxjet, ladygypsy)



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July 27th, 2007 at 9:10 am |
[…] seating; Northwest abandons boarding by rows - Southwest to maintain unassigned seating (for now) - Seat selection, highbrow and low: Eos, Maxjet, Southwest - EasyJet starts charging for early […]
September 11th, 2007 at 1:48 pm |
“This latter trick I have no problem with, since you’d just be using the boarding pass to enter security, not cheating your way into better seats.”
I am very disturbed at this sentence.
September 15th, 2007 at 6:58 pm |
I don’t know how a boarding pass makes anyone more or less of a threat. So, since all people are supposed to be screened when entering the secure area, where’s the problem?