Re: Non-priority baggage handling (Re: Warning - risk of duty free ...)

2007-03-17 Thread Joe Abley
On 16-Mar-2007, at 14:23, John C Klensin wrote: I've also been told by a couple of airlines that, if your bag gets lost and ends up sitting in a figure out who this belongs to and how to get it there area, those brightly-colored tags get the first attention. My experience with Air Canada

Re: Non-priority baggage handling (Re: Warning - risk of duty free ...)

2007-03-17 Thread Randall Gellens
At 7:50 AM -0700 3/16/07, Joe Touch wrote: AFAICT, they're just visible indicators of who flies a lot, which means they also tell people which bags might be more valuable to steal. I ask them not to put the tags on. I suspect that those who travel a lot are less likely to pack anything

Re: Non-priority baggage handling (Re: Warning - risk of duty free ...)

2007-03-17 Thread Randall Gellens
At 4:18 PM -0400 3/15/07, Andrew G. Malis wrote: I've found that most airports ignore them, so I'm always pleasantly surprised when the priority bags come out first. My experience has been that this varies a lot by airport, and often by carrier at an airport, both for putting the tags on,

Re: Non-priority baggage handling (Re: Warning - risk of duty free ...)

2007-03-17 Thread Randall Gellens
At 9:33 AM -0700 3/15/07, Clint Chaplin wrote: The only airport I've seen actually honor that tag is Singapore. San Francisco doesn't care, and neither did Paris nor London. Neither, come to think of it, did Frankfurt. I've experienced priority-tagged bags coming out first at several

WG Action: Conclusion of Site Multihoming in IPv6 WG (multi6)

2007-03-17 Thread IESG Secretary
The Site Multihoming in IPv6 WG (multi6) in the Operations and Management Area has concluded. The IESG contact persons are Davis Kessens and Dan Romascanu. The mailing list will be closed. ___ IETF-Announce mailing list IETF-Announce@ietf.org

WG Action: Conclusion of Open Pluggable Edge Services (opes)

2007-03-17 Thread IESG Secretary
The Open Pluggable Edge Services WG (opes) in the Applications Area has concluded. The IESG contact persons are Lisa Dusseault and Ted Hardie. Originally chartered to work on a generic framework for call-out protocols and an HTTP profile, the group completed work on RFCs 3752, 3835, 3836, 3837,