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SAMSUNG HAS UNVEILED two new high-end (and high size) smartphones in its latest attempt to wrest control of the global phone market from Apple.
The two phones, the Galaxy S6 Edge+ and the Galaxy Note 5, were launched at an industry event earlier today in New York.
The South Korean giant has taken the decision to launch the phones some months ahead of the normal launch-time for previous generations, again in an effort to get the jump on its iOS rival which won’t launch the new version of the iPhone until September.
Both phones will sport massive 5.7 inch (14.5cm) screens meaning they can effectively double as tablets (phablets).
Samsung
Samsung
Both also pack 16 megapixel cameras, admittedly fairly standard for high-end phones at this stage, together with 4gb of ram and quad-HD screens.
The two new phones will both incorporate a HD live-streaming to Youtube service together with a ultra-high quality audio format.
Significantly, it was announced at the event that Samsung’s credit-card style payment system Samsung Pay, which allows its phones to trigger payment transactions, is set to go live later in August. It won’t reach our side of Europe until after September however.
The S6 Edge Plus will retail for something over €800 when it arrives here later in the month.
The ‘plus’ in its name refers to its larger screen, 1.5cm bigger than its previous incarnation.
The more business-oriented Note, operated with a stylus, will not be appearing in Europe however, at least not initially, in a move which Samsung claims is purely marketing related.
Samsung
Samsung
It’s been a tough couple of months for the South Korean tech manufacturer, with Apple’s new-found concentration on large-screened phones putting a dent in their profits.
Earlier in the day, Samsung was somewhat ‘trolled’ by Chinese producer Xiaomi who launched their new phablet, the Redmi Note 2 (which will retail for significantly less than the new Samsung Note) unexpectedly in Beijing.
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Its €110 in total, your changing the name on the booking not each of the tickets, once the name in the booking is changed the tickets update automatically.
The reason Ryanair charge a high name change fee is so that people don’t sell their flights to other people. It’s nothing to do with the cost of printing paper.
If there was no name change fee, I could by loads of flights and sell them on eBay / DoneDeal for a profit.
I buy a flight for €10 to London, then wait until flights go up to say €80 and then sell it to person for €30. They pay the name change fee so it cost them €60 (they save) and I’m €40 up?
hmmm you could try -but the person with the same name would also require to want to fly from the same location to the same destination at the same time you booked for – if ya think that through its probably not a great money spinner of an idea !!
Amazing how people don’t get Alan’s and Ryanair’s explanation. If name change was cheap, dealer would buy the cheap tickets way in advance and then by the time you have the money for your holiday, family and friends arranged, days off from work organaised, (like Ibiza, price is nothing if you booked early feb-march for the summer, and then go crazy from may on for the same period), Ryanair would not have anymore cheap tickets but you could still buy them cheap from dealers who bought them way before you had the idea to travel. Why would you need the same name as bookings made for if you could change it cheap???? Dealers would make profit not Ryanair. Ryanair would go bankrupt. You can hate Ryanair as much as you want but many of us NEED it, and happy with service for the price they charge.
Ironically, by not giving Ryanair the 220 it will cost him more in the long run, he saved £7 by changing his name. I assume he’ll have to change it back at some point (at a cost)…
But just taking this instance, a £220 charge for something that should be free sums this company up.
It’s no skin off their nose to change the name. None whatsoever.
Changing a typo should be free, yes. But changing a forename or surname should not be free, as you can effectively transfer the flight to someone else (someone with the same first name or last name as you).
The large fee is to stop people booking flights far in advance (for example, flights to England during the Rugby World Cup) and then selling them on later, as far as I’m aware. All airlines do it
You don’t seem to get it. There is effectively no cost involved for Ryanair whatsoever to change the name on your ticket. As has already been said, this only exists as a deterrent from an effective secondary market for airline tickets being created by people buying flights for a certain time when they think they stand a chance of making a profit by selling them at a higher price at a later stage. This is the only reason for this charge being so high. In a case like this of a genuine mistake, admittedly it is a hard pill to swallow but to make exceptions in cases like this would be impossible. People’s cynical nature ensures if this cost was , say €20 instead for example, you can be guaranteed that a secondary airline ticket market on the likes of Donedeal would begin to exist immediately.
Quite rightly, Ryanair see this would be damaging to their business model and would drive up the costs for everyone so they rightly ensure it doesn’t exist by insisting on this fee for a name change.
As for your generic go at Ryanair in your original post, pity you didn’t do your research and realise that other airlines also look for the same comparatively high charges for a name change on a ticket, so by your logic all effectively all airlines must be “horrible companies”
All airlines are disgusting. Air travel should be free for everybody. Air travel is a basic human right. Next thing this corrupt government will be taxing flying birds. The sooner this government is overthrown the better.
A typo is rectified very easily, but changing a surname/firstname (which is the case here) discourages people from booking a flight for themselves and passing it onto a friend/spouse for example.
Lots of business moguls on here that don’t understand the simple fact that staff require wages.
Someone has to be paid not just to make the change, but to be available to make the change. Therefor a yearly salary must be accounted for.
Most businesses would spread the cost of employing that person across all of their customers. Ryanair don’t, they charge low prices. When someone makes a mistake they pay. Why? because it costs money to run a business.
Damn that ryanair, how dare they not charge me for other peoples mistakes.
The fee seems more like a deterrent than money grab.
I can see how a higher charge would prevent third-party sellers from purchasing for peak times well in advance and charging a premium plus a nominal fee to change the name. Imagine some unscrupulous group buying blocks of tickets for every bank holiday weekend at the minute bookings are available.
and are these staff paid £220 per 5 minutes? I’m pretty sure it would take less than that. I changed the name on my Aer Lingus flight in January, a week before the flight. The charge? €0.00
You got lucky so, i’ve also heard of people getting name changes done free of charge with Ryanair too, depends on who you get/what mood they are in I suppose
I always ask someone to email me all their details before booking a flight for them. It avoids errors like when booking a flight for a friend called Brendan who turns out to be Patrick on his passport. It’s basic common sense.
A fantastic business who have focused on improving a previously poor customer service over the last few year and have seem to have succeeded based on my recent experiences with them. Disgusting? Please.
O’Leary for Taoiseach
Shane , well said, would be stuck in this s…. weather for me hols if it were not for Michael O Leary. Flights to Spain euro 35.00 and people of Ireland still giving out…….One of Irelands best business men yet. Good on ya Mick.
I know it’s kind of trivial, but I find this really inspiring. Instead of bitching and moaning he took complete charge of the situation and gave himself the best possible result.
I know there are £ signs in the article but where does the gentleman in question hail from. I don’t mean to lecture anyone but what about the five rules of reporting: what, where, when, who, why?
Ryanair. The best thing ever to have happened to the Airline Industry! Why people continue to attack their business methods is beyond me. I remember having to pay over £200 for a return ticket to London with Aer Lingus. Now I pay an average of €60 with Ryanair and that includes priority boarding and seat choice!
Its not just Ryanair who do this everyone.. We had a similar one a few years back.. Booked flights to Central America via ebookers and I had all the passport info for the girls but when I was booking the flights it only asked for names of users to start with – add passport number later so I didn’t check the passport. One of my friends is called Lisa but her passport is Elizabeth. I spent hours on the phone to ebookers who in turn spoke to BA for me on 3 different occasions to get them to change this. They would not change it due to the flight terms. It was going to cost hundreds of euros to get sorted.. In the end my friend changed her name on passport from Elizabeth to Lisa – cost 80euro I think…
Joseph, sounds like jealousy to me. May be begrudgery, but sounds like jealousy. Nothing to stop you making a fortune. Just need to be smart enough and prepared to work at it.
Did this happen in Northern Ireland or Britain or where did it happen? Because the article says “he paid £103 for a new passport and he” so I assume because he paid in British sterling it happened in the UK somewhere, so does anyone know how much it would cost here in Ireland to do the same thing as this guy?
This guy is noting but a clown. Does he think we all came up the Liffey on a Ryanair plane. More publicity for Mr O’Leary. More people talking about his airline.
Are Ryanair actually suggesting people are touting Ryanair tickets ? LOL
hey ive got a cheap ryanair ticket to spain , do you wanna buy it at a reasonable price ? it would take a good salesman and even if it were so who loses ? answer ryanair
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