Is there a service that would inform me whenever a new direct route is scheduled from a given airport? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern) April 2019 photo competition, “Road trip” (Read, rules are different.)When to book tickets from travel sites rather than airline sites?Find direct flights to specific airport for specific date (from any departure airport)Bus search engines for Germany without place of arrival?Searching for flights to “Anywhere” in narrow time frameHow does seat assignment work with 'direct to gate' service from Norwegian?Reliable, Free Flight Alert Website allowing multiple route combinationsAre there any direct international flights to Makhachkala, Russia (Makhachkala Uytash Airport) from anywhere?Finding **cheapest** fares from a country to country/city/airport (including non-guaranteed connections)?Are there any advantages to living near an airline hub?Flexible-date flight search engine with specified weekdays
What does Turing mean by this statement?
Take 2! Is this homebrew Lady of Pain warlock patron balanced?
How to draw/optimize this graph with tikz
QGIS virtual layer functionality does not seem to support memory layers
Crossing US/Canada Border for less than 24 hours
How to plot logistic regression decision boundary?
Significance of Cersei's obsession with elephants?
"Lost his faith in humanity in the trenches of Verdun" — last line of an SF story
How much damage would a cupful of neutron star matter do to the Earth?
Why is it faster to reheat something than it is to cook it?
Should there be a hyphen in the construction "IT affin"?
Amount of permutations on an NxNxN Rubik's Cube
What happened to Thoros of Myr's flaming sword?
Is there any word for a place full of confusion?
Why do early math courses focus on the cross sections of a cone and not on other 3D objects?
How do living politicians protect their readily obtainable signatures from misuse?
Do wooden building fires get hotter than 600°C?
How many time did Arya actually used needle?
How does light 'choose' between wave and particle behaviour?
Why weren't discrete x86 CPUs ever used in game hardware?
How to play a character with a disability or mental disorder without being offensive?
draw dynamic circle around node and edges
AppleTVs create a chatty alternate WiFi network
How do I find out the mythology and history of my Fortress?
Is there a service that would inform me whenever a new direct route is scheduled from a given airport?
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)
April 2019 photo competition, “Road trip” (Read, rules are different.)When to book tickets from travel sites rather than airline sites?Find direct flights to specific airport for specific date (from any departure airport)Bus search engines for Germany without place of arrival?Searching for flights to “Anywhere” in narrow time frameHow does seat assignment work with 'direct to gate' service from Norwegian?Reliable, Free Flight Alert Website allowing multiple route combinationsAre there any direct international flights to Makhachkala, Russia (Makhachkala Uytash Airport) from anywhere?Finding **cheapest** fares from a country to country/city/airport (including non-guaranteed connections)?Are there any advantages to living near an airline hub?Flexible-date flight search engine with specified weekdays
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
On weekends, I like booking cheap direct flights and flying to see a new city. However the number of direct routes from my airport is not that large and I'm always on the lookout for new destinations to pop up for booking.
Is there a website that can automate this for me and send me a notification whenever there are new direct flights from my local airport?
air-travel online-resources
add a comment |
On weekends, I like booking cheap direct flights and flying to see a new city. However the number of direct routes from my airport is not that large and I'm always on the lookout for new destinations to pop up for booking.
Is there a website that can automate this for me and send me a notification whenever there are new direct flights from my local airport?
air-travel online-resources
it's a great question.
– Fattie
Apr 15 at 18:27
Part of the problem is defining what is a "new direct route". Is it an announcement, a scheduled flight, or an actual flight? All 3 of these will have vastly different methods of getting an answer.
– Aaron
yesterday
add a comment |
On weekends, I like booking cheap direct flights and flying to see a new city. However the number of direct routes from my airport is not that large and I'm always on the lookout for new destinations to pop up for booking.
Is there a website that can automate this for me and send me a notification whenever there are new direct flights from my local airport?
air-travel online-resources
On weekends, I like booking cheap direct flights and flying to see a new city. However the number of direct routes from my airport is not that large and I'm always on the lookout for new destinations to pop up for booking.
Is there a website that can automate this for me and send me a notification whenever there are new direct flights from my local airport?
air-travel online-resources
air-travel online-resources
asked Apr 15 at 0:50
JonathanReez♦JonathanReez
50.1k41239518
50.1k41239518
it's a great question.
– Fattie
Apr 15 at 18:27
Part of the problem is defining what is a "new direct route". Is it an announcement, a scheduled flight, or an actual flight? All 3 of these will have vastly different methods of getting an answer.
– Aaron
yesterday
add a comment |
it's a great question.
– Fattie
Apr 15 at 18:27
Part of the problem is defining what is a "new direct route". Is it an announcement, a scheduled flight, or an actual flight? All 3 of these will have vastly different methods of getting an answer.
– Aaron
yesterday
it's a great question.
– Fattie
Apr 15 at 18:27
it's a great question.
– Fattie
Apr 15 at 18:27
Part of the problem is defining what is a "new direct route". Is it an announcement, a scheduled flight, or an actual flight? All 3 of these will have vastly different methods of getting an answer.
– Aaron
yesterday
Part of the problem is defining what is a "new direct route". Is it an announcement, a scheduled flight, or an actual flight? All 3 of these will have vastly different methods of getting an answer.
– Aaron
yesterday
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
By convention, the Wikipedia articles on airports include a table of airlines and (nonstop) destinations, which seems to get updated fairly promptly by avgeeks/crowdsourcing (and it includes upcoming service with the start date noted). First, you could simply check the article on your airport periodically. For automation, depending on your IT skills, you could program a script to download the page periodically and see if the table has changed. Or, you could use Wikipedia itself or another service to set up an email alert when the article is updated, and could even try to limit or filter the emails to when the destinations section is updated if there are a lot of noise updates.
2
you could use Wikipedia itself or another service to set up an email alert when the article is updated,, I've used followthatpage.com when I was looking for jobs.
– gerrit
Apr 15 at 8:17
There are also some add-ons capable of tracking specific pages. Nothing I can recall from memory and probably outdated anyway, but a simple Google search should help with that.
– Ister
Apr 15 at 12:03
2
You can make use of 'Watchlist' - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Watchlist , but this means you will get notified for every edits — it might be someone actually adding new data, committing vandalism, or just someone fixing the typo.
– revi
Apr 15 at 12:17
add a comment |
As a frequent traveller and maintainer of OpenFlights, I'd love it if there was such a thing, but I'm not aware of any such global service and up-to-date route/schedule data in general is pretty tightly locked down with copyrights.
What I do instead is subscribe to relevant blogs and news sites. Some random examples:
Australian Business Traveller keeps a close eye on flights to/from Australia.
Routes Online is a firehose of global updates, with tags that you can use to keep an eye on individual airlines and airports (example).- Most airports and regional aviation authorities also have news feeds that contain updates about new routes; for example, here's Finavia's news for Finland.
Locked down with copyrights? Facts are not subject to copyright. The closest you might get are EU database rights, but their existence is directly due to the lack of copyright on facts. And that just means that in the EU you can't republish the whole database. The proposed "new destination service" would still be legal.
– MSalters
Apr 15 at 7:18
2
@MSalters That may well be the case, but you still need to pay OAG/Innovata $X,000/month for access to their data, which they can turn off for any reason or no reason...
– jpatokal
Apr 15 at 7:28
add a comment |
Since you're interested in specific city the number of airports you're considering seems limited. You may check if they have some sort of a newsfeed/rss on the airport page. I may be wrong, but airports like to brag about any new routes they managed to attract to the airport so the info should be on their webpage. Check if they don't have a newsletter to sign up for.
Even if the answer is no, still all airports I have ever checked have a page for departures/arrivals schedule (not the next x, but the plan for the whole week). Use a tool to track changes on such pages. As mentioned in a comment to a different answer, there are browser add-ons (I used to use UpdateScanner for Firefox, I don't know if it is still working though) to do that.
Another option you may consider is looking for some newspapers regarding airliners or aviation. If there is anything local enough, they may be listing this kind of information (according to their publishing schedule, so probably once a month).
Either case you'll also get some extra junk but that you can rule out by using filters/rules in your mailbox. Changes tracking on the departures page is probably least vulnerable to false positives (i.e. you're notified when there's actually nothing interesting changed).
I was going to also suggest this. If you're flying out of a Chicago airport, for example, the City of Chicago likes to issue press releases whenever new flights are added. This press release announced the new non-stop flight from ORD to AKL in New Zealand.
– stevevance
Apr 16 at 2:41
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "273"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f135684%2fis-there-a-service-that-would-inform-me-whenever-a-new-direct-route-is-scheduled%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
By convention, the Wikipedia articles on airports include a table of airlines and (nonstop) destinations, which seems to get updated fairly promptly by avgeeks/crowdsourcing (and it includes upcoming service with the start date noted). First, you could simply check the article on your airport periodically. For automation, depending on your IT skills, you could program a script to download the page periodically and see if the table has changed. Or, you could use Wikipedia itself or another service to set up an email alert when the article is updated, and could even try to limit or filter the emails to when the destinations section is updated if there are a lot of noise updates.
2
you could use Wikipedia itself or another service to set up an email alert when the article is updated,, I've used followthatpage.com when I was looking for jobs.
– gerrit
Apr 15 at 8:17
There are also some add-ons capable of tracking specific pages. Nothing I can recall from memory and probably outdated anyway, but a simple Google search should help with that.
– Ister
Apr 15 at 12:03
2
You can make use of 'Watchlist' - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Watchlist , but this means you will get notified for every edits — it might be someone actually adding new data, committing vandalism, or just someone fixing the typo.
– revi
Apr 15 at 12:17
add a comment |
By convention, the Wikipedia articles on airports include a table of airlines and (nonstop) destinations, which seems to get updated fairly promptly by avgeeks/crowdsourcing (and it includes upcoming service with the start date noted). First, you could simply check the article on your airport periodically. For automation, depending on your IT skills, you could program a script to download the page periodically and see if the table has changed. Or, you could use Wikipedia itself or another service to set up an email alert when the article is updated, and could even try to limit or filter the emails to when the destinations section is updated if there are a lot of noise updates.
2
you could use Wikipedia itself or another service to set up an email alert when the article is updated,, I've used followthatpage.com when I was looking for jobs.
– gerrit
Apr 15 at 8:17
There are also some add-ons capable of tracking specific pages. Nothing I can recall from memory and probably outdated anyway, but a simple Google search should help with that.
– Ister
Apr 15 at 12:03
2
You can make use of 'Watchlist' - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Watchlist , but this means you will get notified for every edits — it might be someone actually adding new data, committing vandalism, or just someone fixing the typo.
– revi
Apr 15 at 12:17
add a comment |
By convention, the Wikipedia articles on airports include a table of airlines and (nonstop) destinations, which seems to get updated fairly promptly by avgeeks/crowdsourcing (and it includes upcoming service with the start date noted). First, you could simply check the article on your airport periodically. For automation, depending on your IT skills, you could program a script to download the page periodically and see if the table has changed. Or, you could use Wikipedia itself or another service to set up an email alert when the article is updated, and could even try to limit or filter the emails to when the destinations section is updated if there are a lot of noise updates.
By convention, the Wikipedia articles on airports include a table of airlines and (nonstop) destinations, which seems to get updated fairly promptly by avgeeks/crowdsourcing (and it includes upcoming service with the start date noted). First, you could simply check the article on your airport periodically. For automation, depending on your IT skills, you could program a script to download the page periodically and see if the table has changed. Or, you could use Wikipedia itself or another service to set up an email alert when the article is updated, and could even try to limit or filter the emails to when the destinations section is updated if there are a lot of noise updates.
answered Apr 15 at 5:11
nanomannanoman
44638
44638
2
you could use Wikipedia itself or another service to set up an email alert when the article is updated,, I've used followthatpage.com when I was looking for jobs.
– gerrit
Apr 15 at 8:17
There are also some add-ons capable of tracking specific pages. Nothing I can recall from memory and probably outdated anyway, but a simple Google search should help with that.
– Ister
Apr 15 at 12:03
2
You can make use of 'Watchlist' - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Watchlist , but this means you will get notified for every edits — it might be someone actually adding new data, committing vandalism, or just someone fixing the typo.
– revi
Apr 15 at 12:17
add a comment |
2
you could use Wikipedia itself or another service to set up an email alert when the article is updated,, I've used followthatpage.com when I was looking for jobs.
– gerrit
Apr 15 at 8:17
There are also some add-ons capable of tracking specific pages. Nothing I can recall from memory and probably outdated anyway, but a simple Google search should help with that.
– Ister
Apr 15 at 12:03
2
You can make use of 'Watchlist' - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Watchlist , but this means you will get notified for every edits — it might be someone actually adding new data, committing vandalism, or just someone fixing the typo.
– revi
Apr 15 at 12:17
2
2
you could use Wikipedia itself or another service to set up an email alert when the article is updated,, I've used followthatpage.com when I was looking for jobs.
– gerrit
Apr 15 at 8:17
you could use Wikipedia itself or another service to set up an email alert when the article is updated,, I've used followthatpage.com when I was looking for jobs.
– gerrit
Apr 15 at 8:17
There are also some add-ons capable of tracking specific pages. Nothing I can recall from memory and probably outdated anyway, but a simple Google search should help with that.
– Ister
Apr 15 at 12:03
There are also some add-ons capable of tracking specific pages. Nothing I can recall from memory and probably outdated anyway, but a simple Google search should help with that.
– Ister
Apr 15 at 12:03
2
2
You can make use of 'Watchlist' - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Watchlist , but this means you will get notified for every edits — it might be someone actually adding new data, committing vandalism, or just someone fixing the typo.
– revi
Apr 15 at 12:17
You can make use of 'Watchlist' - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Watchlist , but this means you will get notified for every edits — it might be someone actually adding new data, committing vandalism, or just someone fixing the typo.
– revi
Apr 15 at 12:17
add a comment |
As a frequent traveller and maintainer of OpenFlights, I'd love it if there was such a thing, but I'm not aware of any such global service and up-to-date route/schedule data in general is pretty tightly locked down with copyrights.
What I do instead is subscribe to relevant blogs and news sites. Some random examples:
Australian Business Traveller keeps a close eye on flights to/from Australia.
Routes Online is a firehose of global updates, with tags that you can use to keep an eye on individual airlines and airports (example).- Most airports and regional aviation authorities also have news feeds that contain updates about new routes; for example, here's Finavia's news for Finland.
Locked down with copyrights? Facts are not subject to copyright. The closest you might get are EU database rights, but their existence is directly due to the lack of copyright on facts. And that just means that in the EU you can't republish the whole database. The proposed "new destination service" would still be legal.
– MSalters
Apr 15 at 7:18
2
@MSalters That may well be the case, but you still need to pay OAG/Innovata $X,000/month for access to their data, which they can turn off for any reason or no reason...
– jpatokal
Apr 15 at 7:28
add a comment |
As a frequent traveller and maintainer of OpenFlights, I'd love it if there was such a thing, but I'm not aware of any such global service and up-to-date route/schedule data in general is pretty tightly locked down with copyrights.
What I do instead is subscribe to relevant blogs and news sites. Some random examples:
Australian Business Traveller keeps a close eye on flights to/from Australia.
Routes Online is a firehose of global updates, with tags that you can use to keep an eye on individual airlines and airports (example).- Most airports and regional aviation authorities also have news feeds that contain updates about new routes; for example, here's Finavia's news for Finland.
Locked down with copyrights? Facts are not subject to copyright. The closest you might get are EU database rights, but their existence is directly due to the lack of copyright on facts. And that just means that in the EU you can't republish the whole database. The proposed "new destination service" would still be legal.
– MSalters
Apr 15 at 7:18
2
@MSalters That may well be the case, but you still need to pay OAG/Innovata $X,000/month for access to their data, which they can turn off for any reason or no reason...
– jpatokal
Apr 15 at 7:28
add a comment |
As a frequent traveller and maintainer of OpenFlights, I'd love it if there was such a thing, but I'm not aware of any such global service and up-to-date route/schedule data in general is pretty tightly locked down with copyrights.
What I do instead is subscribe to relevant blogs and news sites. Some random examples:
Australian Business Traveller keeps a close eye on flights to/from Australia.
Routes Online is a firehose of global updates, with tags that you can use to keep an eye on individual airlines and airports (example).- Most airports and regional aviation authorities also have news feeds that contain updates about new routes; for example, here's Finavia's news for Finland.
As a frequent traveller and maintainer of OpenFlights, I'd love it if there was such a thing, but I'm not aware of any such global service and up-to-date route/schedule data in general is pretty tightly locked down with copyrights.
What I do instead is subscribe to relevant blogs and news sites. Some random examples:
Australian Business Traveller keeps a close eye on flights to/from Australia.
Routes Online is a firehose of global updates, with tags that you can use to keep an eye on individual airlines and airports (example).- Most airports and regional aviation authorities also have news feeds that contain updates about new routes; for example, here's Finavia's news for Finland.
edited Apr 15 at 15:44
Michael Hampton
38.5k386170
38.5k386170
answered Apr 15 at 0:59
jpatokaljpatokal
118k18377539
118k18377539
Locked down with copyrights? Facts are not subject to copyright. The closest you might get are EU database rights, but their existence is directly due to the lack of copyright on facts. And that just means that in the EU you can't republish the whole database. The proposed "new destination service" would still be legal.
– MSalters
Apr 15 at 7:18
2
@MSalters That may well be the case, but you still need to pay OAG/Innovata $X,000/month for access to their data, which they can turn off for any reason or no reason...
– jpatokal
Apr 15 at 7:28
add a comment |
Locked down with copyrights? Facts are not subject to copyright. The closest you might get are EU database rights, but their existence is directly due to the lack of copyright on facts. And that just means that in the EU you can't republish the whole database. The proposed "new destination service" would still be legal.
– MSalters
Apr 15 at 7:18
2
@MSalters That may well be the case, but you still need to pay OAG/Innovata $X,000/month for access to their data, which they can turn off for any reason or no reason...
– jpatokal
Apr 15 at 7:28
Locked down with copyrights? Facts are not subject to copyright. The closest you might get are EU database rights, but their existence is directly due to the lack of copyright on facts. And that just means that in the EU you can't republish the whole database. The proposed "new destination service" would still be legal.
– MSalters
Apr 15 at 7:18
Locked down with copyrights? Facts are not subject to copyright. The closest you might get are EU database rights, but their existence is directly due to the lack of copyright on facts. And that just means that in the EU you can't republish the whole database. The proposed "new destination service" would still be legal.
– MSalters
Apr 15 at 7:18
2
2
@MSalters That may well be the case, but you still need to pay OAG/Innovata $X,000/month for access to their data, which they can turn off for any reason or no reason...
– jpatokal
Apr 15 at 7:28
@MSalters That may well be the case, but you still need to pay OAG/Innovata $X,000/month for access to their data, which they can turn off for any reason or no reason...
– jpatokal
Apr 15 at 7:28
add a comment |
Since you're interested in specific city the number of airports you're considering seems limited. You may check if they have some sort of a newsfeed/rss on the airport page. I may be wrong, but airports like to brag about any new routes they managed to attract to the airport so the info should be on their webpage. Check if they don't have a newsletter to sign up for.
Even if the answer is no, still all airports I have ever checked have a page for departures/arrivals schedule (not the next x, but the plan for the whole week). Use a tool to track changes on such pages. As mentioned in a comment to a different answer, there are browser add-ons (I used to use UpdateScanner for Firefox, I don't know if it is still working though) to do that.
Another option you may consider is looking for some newspapers regarding airliners or aviation. If there is anything local enough, they may be listing this kind of information (according to their publishing schedule, so probably once a month).
Either case you'll also get some extra junk but that you can rule out by using filters/rules in your mailbox. Changes tracking on the departures page is probably least vulnerable to false positives (i.e. you're notified when there's actually nothing interesting changed).
I was going to also suggest this. If you're flying out of a Chicago airport, for example, the City of Chicago likes to issue press releases whenever new flights are added. This press release announced the new non-stop flight from ORD to AKL in New Zealand.
– stevevance
Apr 16 at 2:41
add a comment |
Since you're interested in specific city the number of airports you're considering seems limited. You may check if they have some sort of a newsfeed/rss on the airport page. I may be wrong, but airports like to brag about any new routes they managed to attract to the airport so the info should be on their webpage. Check if they don't have a newsletter to sign up for.
Even if the answer is no, still all airports I have ever checked have a page for departures/arrivals schedule (not the next x, but the plan for the whole week). Use a tool to track changes on such pages. As mentioned in a comment to a different answer, there are browser add-ons (I used to use UpdateScanner for Firefox, I don't know if it is still working though) to do that.
Another option you may consider is looking for some newspapers regarding airliners or aviation. If there is anything local enough, they may be listing this kind of information (according to their publishing schedule, so probably once a month).
Either case you'll also get some extra junk but that you can rule out by using filters/rules in your mailbox. Changes tracking on the departures page is probably least vulnerable to false positives (i.e. you're notified when there's actually nothing interesting changed).
I was going to also suggest this. If you're flying out of a Chicago airport, for example, the City of Chicago likes to issue press releases whenever new flights are added. This press release announced the new non-stop flight from ORD to AKL in New Zealand.
– stevevance
Apr 16 at 2:41
add a comment |
Since you're interested in specific city the number of airports you're considering seems limited. You may check if they have some sort of a newsfeed/rss on the airport page. I may be wrong, but airports like to brag about any new routes they managed to attract to the airport so the info should be on their webpage. Check if they don't have a newsletter to sign up for.
Even if the answer is no, still all airports I have ever checked have a page for departures/arrivals schedule (not the next x, but the plan for the whole week). Use a tool to track changes on such pages. As mentioned in a comment to a different answer, there are browser add-ons (I used to use UpdateScanner for Firefox, I don't know if it is still working though) to do that.
Another option you may consider is looking for some newspapers regarding airliners or aviation. If there is anything local enough, they may be listing this kind of information (according to their publishing schedule, so probably once a month).
Either case you'll also get some extra junk but that you can rule out by using filters/rules in your mailbox. Changes tracking on the departures page is probably least vulnerable to false positives (i.e. you're notified when there's actually nothing interesting changed).
Since you're interested in specific city the number of airports you're considering seems limited. You may check if they have some sort of a newsfeed/rss on the airport page. I may be wrong, but airports like to brag about any new routes they managed to attract to the airport so the info should be on their webpage. Check if they don't have a newsletter to sign up for.
Even if the answer is no, still all airports I have ever checked have a page for departures/arrivals schedule (not the next x, but the plan for the whole week). Use a tool to track changes on such pages. As mentioned in a comment to a different answer, there are browser add-ons (I used to use UpdateScanner for Firefox, I don't know if it is still working though) to do that.
Another option you may consider is looking for some newspapers regarding airliners or aviation. If there is anything local enough, they may be listing this kind of information (according to their publishing schedule, so probably once a month).
Either case you'll also get some extra junk but that you can rule out by using filters/rules in your mailbox. Changes tracking on the departures page is probably least vulnerable to false positives (i.e. you're notified when there's actually nothing interesting changed).
answered Apr 15 at 12:11
IsterIster
61617
61617
I was going to also suggest this. If you're flying out of a Chicago airport, for example, the City of Chicago likes to issue press releases whenever new flights are added. This press release announced the new non-stop flight from ORD to AKL in New Zealand.
– stevevance
Apr 16 at 2:41
add a comment |
I was going to also suggest this. If you're flying out of a Chicago airport, for example, the City of Chicago likes to issue press releases whenever new flights are added. This press release announced the new non-stop flight from ORD to AKL in New Zealand.
– stevevance
Apr 16 at 2:41
I was going to also suggest this. If you're flying out of a Chicago airport, for example, the City of Chicago likes to issue press releases whenever new flights are added. This press release announced the new non-stop flight from ORD to AKL in New Zealand.
– stevevance
Apr 16 at 2:41
I was going to also suggest this. If you're flying out of a Chicago airport, for example, the City of Chicago likes to issue press releases whenever new flights are added. This press release announced the new non-stop flight from ORD to AKL in New Zealand.
– stevevance
Apr 16 at 2:41
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Travel Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f135684%2fis-there-a-service-that-would-inform-me-whenever-a-new-direct-route-is-scheduled%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
it's a great question.
– Fattie
Apr 15 at 18:27
Part of the problem is defining what is a "new direct route". Is it an announcement, a scheduled flight, or an actual flight? All 3 of these will have vastly different methods of getting an answer.
– Aaron
yesterday