This is correct, as I am a mentalist with 15 years of experience, and I have also been teaching youtubers and streamers how to apply this strategy, which, as you can see, is working!Mr. Rinaudo, despite his ADHD, is a good student, growing at a rate of 5% each month.
More information about how to use this method in your daily life can be found at https://www.trivago.com/
Based on your comment, let me clarify that AirBnB is not an actual B&B. Regular people offer their homes/rooms as hotel space and is generally cheaper than a regular hotel room.
Explore https://www.airbnb.com/ and compare it with the cost of a hotel room at for example https://www.trivago.com/
We stayed at Siri Lanta Resort resort (not to be confused with Sri lanta). It was quite a ways from the beach and while the woman who owns it was very kind and their food was good, the beds were not comfortable and we stayed off a stretch of the beach that didn’t have much outside of an outdoor bar/restaurant to offer. There were a couple shops/restaurants we could walk to but I was let down for sure compared to the experience in Chiangmai.
Thanks for your great suggestions! :)
>Your aggregator would only make that worse.
Why do you think it would make things worse? Do you think that https://www.trivago.com/ made it worse for hotels?
>Maybe rather than pulling data from delivery services, you could pull data from and link to the restaurants' websites directly? Often restaurants prefer customers to order directly so the delivery services don't take a cut.
Could you give me a more detailed explanation about what you mean, please?
I think that the problem here is that most of the restaurant, ice cream shop, fastfood ect. rely only on food delivery services and on their website you cannot place orders.. Besides they have their menus in a pdf format.
Why not use a travel aggregation site like Trivago: https://www.trivago.com/ where you have sliders for price, ratings, etc. While these aren’t showcasing local deals, they might be more budget friendly. E.g., The Phoenix Park Hotel, near the Capital is ~ $100 with the Dubliner restaurant at ground level.
Basically a PWA app has more in common with an android or IOS app then it does with a website bookmark, if the developer treats it that way.
https://web.dev/progressive-web-apps/
So for starters, a PWA centers on a file called a manifest, which tells the browser what icon to use, what permissions it should have, and what other details are available.
Next up is the ability for service workers (a piece of javascript that runs in the background) to store whole parts of the webpage offline. Or just tell the user they're offline, or include a maze if you're trivago. https://www.trivago.com/offline
In pretty much every OS but IOS you can also connect websites to notifications through service workers.
A regular bookmark is just a reference to a location on the internet. A PWA, when taken as more then just a fancy shortcut, also includes other bits of browser technology that puts it more on par with a mobile app.
Microsoft, Google, and Apple have added the ability to install PWA apps from their app stores. Although PWAs don't have as good support in IOS.
Old Faithful Inn - $114 on Trivago
I spent all of 10 seconds finding this, so it might be a bit off (no bathroom room, maybe). But still, makes me very doubtful that you have to spend $500+ to stay there. My parents went last year and they would never spend that much. Where are you getting your prices?
Lots of stuff on Trivago.com in the $200 range.