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Ciafo Launches Travelomy for South Asia

India web products startup Ciafo launches Travelomy, a travel and tourism guide dedicated to South Asia and Web 2.0. With live edit of attractions though, the developers may end up with “Travelohdear” if they are not careful.

Update: The Co-Founder at Ciafo, came to comment that Travelomy uses something called “passive management” to prevent the kind of abuses I mentioned in this article. In this particular case, a very appropriate textual discription smippet was removed as if it were foul language or inappropriate text? Of interest perhaps too, the original snippet I replaced (excerpt below) is not really correct English.

Macchi Bhawan or Fish House is a garden courtyard that lies below the Diwan-i-Khas and surrounded by a two storey structure.

Several things are rather obvious here. First, as you can see, there are a couple of grammatical errors in the above. Second, the use of storey, versus story, illustrates that the author is using UK English, rather than American – significant only if we take the common errors into account – bottom line.. the passage above is wrong. I add a correction below.

Macchi Bhawan, or Fish House, is a garden courtyard that lies beneath the Diwan-i-Khas,  and is surrounded by a two story (or storey if you are selling to the UK) structure.

In any event, passive filters in place or not, Travelomy is onto something in my view. My advice is to get some cracker jack content editors in place though.

Start – original article:

According to the press from Ciafo, a new startup arm of their operations has been launched to cover niche travel in South Asia. 5 countries with roughly 5,000 attractions across India, Nepal, Bhutan, Maldives, and Sri Lanka, offer targeted info for travelers. Argo Travel News tests this little South Asia travel guide that can, or may that is.

Landing of Travelomy

Greetings from the landing of Travelomy bring back memories of such wondrous travel ingenuity as TripSay, all be it not so refined.  As you can see looking at the landing below, the developers were not exactly interested in reinventing the wheel of travel websites. But, this is not to say the service is not useful. Drilling down (exploring deeper) into the site, good information, images, and video are resident – and more importantly, well placed for a regional site.

Travelomy map -centric nature - minimalist to say the least

Deeper inside the travel portal, YouTube video and images, not to mention “better” uses of Google Maps, are available for potential tourists to garner information. But here is where Travelomy loses gas. If the visitor (review critic) looks at the attraction Machchhi Bhawan, for instance, the incompleteness and disjointedness of the site becomes apparent. I am not a huge fan of launching incomplete or buggy tools myself. AND! The imminent Wikipedia type edit-ability of Travelomy is a disaster waiting for an opportunity. It looks like I can just input whatever I want and BINGO! the Travelomy community has to live with it.

Real time, unfiltered editing - not exactly asking for brilliance

While the need for regional travel portals is imminently clear to us here at Argophilia (we are after all building one), drafting and releasing a PRWeb press release to the world, before a certain level of completeness is achieved, is not good PR. I will say that the developers have announced too, their rather “freewheeling” user generated content goal – or apparent one. The news does speak of editing on the fly. The image below shows my own edit gone live. Of course we do provide content for the best on the web, Stay dot com (among others), so I would not expect cutting edge venue descriptions abounding in general.

As you can see, I live edited their text - but then we are content providers for the best

For more information about Bangalore’s Ciafo, or coming features for their Travelomy portal, you might want to visit their corporate website as well.  Their Locappa mobile app, upcoming, seems most interesting of all. As for Travelomy? We’ll have to see where this unfettered editing leads and what added value the developers can throw at it. More later on this.

Categories: Travel Technology
Phil Butler: Phil is a prolific technology, travel, and news journalist and editor. A former public relations executive, he is an analyst and contributor to key hospitality and travel media, as well as a geopolitical expert for more than a dozen international media outlets.

View Comments (5)

  • Philip,
    I am the co-founder @ Ciafo, the company behind Travelomy.
    At the outset, thanks for a balanced review, you cover both sides of the story well.
    I would however like to point out a major correction here - the content is not freewheeling as you put it, it is in fact duly managed. If you check out http://www.travelomy.com/machchhi-bhawan now, you will notice that your update has been declined, and the exact earlier content restored.

    We call it passive management, because in general we trust our users, but are ready to take appropriate action if we notice any mis-use of our trust. And given that the edits can be made only after logging into the site with Facebook credentials, it is not hard for us to ban the user entirely if required or publicly ask them to desist from such acts. Somewhat akin to Wikipedia style of monitoring your IP for edits, but in a lot more social way as such a message is gonna be visible to your friends and family too.

    My request to you would be to update the review with this correction. Please reach out to me at my mail id for any specific questions, I would be glad to answer.

    Amarpreet Kalkat

    • @Amarpreet - Of course I could not know this - but I would point out (in my humbler 12,000 beta review opinion) that removing my addition in favor of the inferior one in default, is not exactly premium user generated content adoption. I actually researched the small snipped of info???

      As you suggest, will update the review to include that you can manually edit any content added. I hope you guys have a Wikipedia organization out there if the platform is heavily adopted. :) Passive will quickly become improbable if 1000 people edit stuff at once. Cheers.

      Always,
      Phil

  • Well Phillip, that was just to make the point, your content has now been incorporated :-)
    And yes, we do have the plans in place to review and manage content at a scale, important goal right now is to get there.

    Kalkat

    • @Amarpreet - understood, and point well taken. We will be watching and rooting for you too. Regional travel tools, when added to hubs, can be far more effective than what we now see from the bigger players, I feel any way.

      Always,
      Phil

  • Btw Phil, do check out the bottom of the page, we do not forget to give due credit;-)

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