• sem@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    16 minutes ago

    Why is the Airbnb $225? This is the point of it to be cheaper. Also, I haven’t used an Airbnb in approximately seven years.

  • Psythik
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    Perfectly sums up why I always pick a chain hotel for my vacations. I’m here to relax, not follow a cleaning checklist.

    I mean, seriously, does AirBnB really not include housekeeping services as part of your stay? Why would anyone agree to stay at one of these? Daily housekeeping is a make or break amenity for me. How is that not the case for everyone?

  • Arancello@aussie.zone
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    2 hours ago

    Two bad experiences with airbnb. Will never use them again. I’d prefer hotel now. Actually cheaper, closer to right things and much much less hassle.

  • locahosr443
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    8 hours ago

    I rent apartments a lot on booking.com for staff travel, it’s never any hassle.

    Used Airbnb once, never again.

    Family book it often if I don’t get ahead of them, apart from one time the places are always sub par and half the stuff is broken.

    • guismo@aussie.zone
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      3 hours ago

      On the other hand, I’d pay extra to not give those cunts and their israeli buddies a cent. But it’s almost impossible now. I call the hotel and they say “make a booking through booking.com (or one of its thousands of sites)”

      Before I would hang up and look for another one, but I realise now that the cancer has taken total control.

      Airbnb, Amazon, this shit… Only someone insane would refuse to bend to our benevolent overlords, and I am still insane, putting up a fight I already lost.

  • Lexi Sneptaur@pawb.social
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    11 hours ago

    My favorite hotel is the “C’mon inn” in Montana, North Dakota, Wyoming, etc. It’s a small family-owned chain that charges about $100 per night and has rustic decor and always has a pool and a bunch of jacuzzis. Amazing service, tasty breakfast, low price, and I’m not feeding some gigantic corporation. It’s a matter of finding the smaller outfits, I tell ya.

    • TankovayaDiviziya
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      11 hours ago

      I’d love to try if weren’t for the fact that you have Trump harassing foreigners.

      • Joanie Parker
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        7 hours ago

        You think he’s leaving the citizens alone? We’re all fucked.

  • balsoft@lemmy.ml
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    5 hours ago

    To me, it’s simple.

    Crash out in the evening, be gone in the morning? A bed in a dormitory will do fine.

    Stay for a few nights, go out every day to see the city/hike/etc? Gimme a cheap hotel room with a shared bathroom.

    A longer stay for a workation/etc? Get a cheap apartment (at least a studio with a bathroom and a kitchen), because going out to eat fucking sucks.

    • alekwithak
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      5 hours ago

      I usually opt for a Staybridge Inn or Homewood Suites. All rooms have kitchenettes regardless of size with a full size fridge, oven, stove, etc. They have studios at regular hotel prices and 1, 2 and 3 bedroom suites for not much more. Complimentary breakfast and dinner as well as two free drinks per night (at least at Staybridge). Onsite laundry, gym, and usually a pool as well. These places were Lifesavers when I used to travel for work.

  • uncouple9831@lemmy.zip
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    16 hours ago

    This makes an assumption that the Airbnb you booked actually exists. That is usually but not always a correct assumption. 🫥

    • Lemminary
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      13 hours ago

      And if it does exist, sometimes it’s not legal. 🤡

      I once had the guy tell me to enter and exit the building discreetly because the other tenants weren’t supposed to know he was subleasing the apartment. I think they knew.

      • bstix@feddit.dk
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        13 hours ago

        I had the same thing happen to me in London. Twice.

        Both booked from hotels.com. The place didn’t have the advertised room available so we got moved to another location. Both times.

        • markovs_gun
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          13 hours ago

          Never book through Hotels.com even for actual hotels. Just look at the price and call the hotel directly. They will always price match because Hotels.com takes a cut of bookings through their site so they always win out if you book directly at the same price instead of going through hotels.com

        • uncouple9831@lemmy.zip
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          13 hours ago

          At least they moved you, I got a voucher that definitely did not cover a same day booking in the city where I was. And that was the last time I used Airbnb.

  • Matriks404
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    14 hours ago

    I’ve never used AirBNB. What’s so special about it?

    • PokerChips@programming.dev
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      3 hours ago

      15 years ago it was much cheaper than a hotel. Depending on the type of reservation, you may also get a kitchen and basically a house.

      But things have changed and now they’re not the cheapest route anymore. Some people get horror stories as you can imagine because… People do shitty things sometimes as is human law of statistics.

    • The_Jit
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      2 hours ago

      I will do an AirBNnB when traveling with the wife and kids and another family, so all the kids can interact with each other early in the morning and us adults can all hang out later at night. We have had really good places, but we also do research on the place. I also skip anyplace that has no picture of the front of the place so I can find it on Google Street view and I skip any where with all the BS like in the picture. Otherwise, hotels all the way are better.

    • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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      10 hours ago

      Rent a house instead of a hotel room. We’ve used that and other services like VRBO to rent cabins in the mountains. There’s nothing really “special” about it and it’s not really different from those other services like VRBO that came before. I think originally the difference was letting people rent a spare room, but I’ve personally never met anyone who has used that functionality (leasing or renting side).

      • Psythik
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        1 hour ago

        Why would anyone want to stay anywhere but a hotel/resort on vacation? How does AirBnB handle housekeeping services? It’s not really up to the guest to clean, right?

        • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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          20 minutes ago

          Define clean? If there are dishes, you do them yourself. If you make a massive mess you clean it yourself to avoid fees. At the end of the stay you generally do something simple like toss all used bedding into one spot. Sometimes they expect you to start laundry by putting all towels in the washer. So, yeah, sort of, but there’s a massive difference between cleaning up after yourself and starting the laundry compared to sanitizing everything, vacuuming everything, etc.

          Let me put it like this. I hate house keeping. It’s the worst. I’ve never viewed the check out requirements at any of the places I stayed as too much. Sure, there’s the occasional nightmare scenario, but hotels have nightmares too.

    • madjo@feddit.nl
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      13 hours ago

      It used to be the cheaper option compared to hotels. Because it used to be people renting out a spare room.

      • dogs0n@sh.itjust.works
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        13 hours ago

        And now it is (helping) ruining the housing market for us normal folk, with all these “entrepreneurs” buying up houses to list for high short stay rents on airbnb.

        • buttnugget
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          12 hours ago

          I would be shocked if it had any appreciable impact at all, but it certainly isn’t helping.

          • jali67@lemmy.zip
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            5 hours ago

            There’s a reason it is banned or considered being banned in some cities around the world.

            • buttnugget
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              5 hours ago

              Correct! The reason it could be banned is because it is acceptable to ban under the neoliberal order. Notice how they haven’t banned rent even though that permanently solves the problem.

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              5 hours ago

              I’d be happy to be wrong but since supply and demand aren’t really impactful on market rate housing, it probably doesn’t do much except piss off morons.

              • RubberElectrons
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                3 hours ago

                You’re right on a micro level, but on macro scale, it’s absolutely making an impact.

          • Fuckfuckmyfuckingass
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            11 hours ago

            In large cities there are entire apartment buildings that have been converted to illegal hotels on Air BNB. It’s a huge problem, not the entire problem, but a damn big one.

            • buttnugget
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              5 hours ago

              Supply and demand are not really issues with housing, so again, it’s probably not an appreciable impact. Don’t believe the YIMBY lies.

            • RobotsLeftHand
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              10 hours ago

              I go to a lot of estate sales. A subset of the customers are people who have Airbnbs and are there for furniture and decorations.

      • ByteOnBikes@discuss.online
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        13 hours ago

        Yep! And those hosts bend over backwards. Like here’s a spare room, here’s some local chocolates from our town chocolatier. I made these jerkies. You’re invited to our 8pm fireplace time and have s’mores.

        It was a real community. They still exist. But they’re overshadowed by shitty Airbnbs that want you to clean the gutters and mop the floors now for twice the price of a hotel.

        • RobertoOberto@sh.itjust.works
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          10 hours ago

          jerkies

          Reading the plural form of “jerky” makes me feel oddly uneasy.

          Is that just like… several pieces of beef jerky or deer jerky?

          • _stranger_
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            7 hours ago

            I’m something of a jerkonnoisseur myself, and I have never considered the plural form of Jerky. This is like experiencing semantic satiation for the first time.

    • ByteOnBikes@discuss.online
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      13 hours ago

      I have a fondness for AirBnB. It’s gotten way bad in the past decade, since it’s being gamed.

      Back then, there wasn’t much of a review system for shitty places. Today, Google Maps, Yelp, forums, social media - they can warn you about shitty places. And from my experience back then, a lot of hotels were scams.

      Need a place to crash? You can either get a scary motel for like $40 that might have bed bugs, or a hotel for $300. I remember my first time in 2000 booking a hotel over the phone, having them save me a room, only to get there and these fuckers tried to upcharge me. I walked and they said, “Good luck finding a room in the middle of the night!” My mom eats specific foods because of her health issues, and Airbnbs often have shared kitchens. Hotels only recently started adding kitchenettes. And some hotels had locked devices. TV was extra. Fridge was extra. Touch snacks, fucking extra. You expected to pay $250 and here’s a bill for $600. Don’t want to pay? Well we’ll call the cops.

      Airbnb and Uber gave people options, and you can give bad reviews to these bad actors. Having all this competition, hotels and taxis improved dramatically.

      Of course, now Airbnb hosts (not Airbnb the company) took a lot of the shitty behavior that hotels used to do. Not to mention a lot of the Airbnbs are now owned by real estate companies who are trying to squeeze every penny.

      So yeah, hotels have come back around to being a better service. And now if you get fucked over by the Marriot or something, take photos, leave a bad review, and they bend over backwards to apologize.

    • _stranger_
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      13 hours ago

      Location and large parties. You can usually find a short term rental in places where there aren’t any hotels (like near national parks, remote beaches, specific parts of certain cities).

      It’s often cheaper to split a short term house rental between a large party than it is to get everyone rooms in a hotel. I’ve spent $700 a night at an AirBnB before because it was for a house with enough bedrooms, living rooms and kitchens for 14 people (with beach access). It was like renting an entire small hotel for a weekend.

  • ChickenLadyLovesLife
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    17 hours ago

    I stayed at one AirBnB where the owner had replaced all the kitchen counters with untreated butcher block. The instructions basically said “don’t use the kitchen”. For bonus points, my parents got the one bedroom and I had to sleep in the kids’ room … on the bottom bunk with the actual kid’s sheets because there weren’t any other sheets in the house. I just felt sorry for the kid.

  • Joanie Parker
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    7 hours ago

    Before ABB was forced to add all the cleaning fees because Big Hotel was losing their ass. I loved getting a good Airbnb.

    • IMALlama
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      5 hours ago

      This seems consumer driven as the fees were not presented in a very transparent manner.

      Source

      This move towards transparent pricing is a direct result of this review and social media backlash over excessive clean fees and chores.

      Source

    • Kushan
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      17 hours ago

      The early days were actually great. People renting out spare rooms for cheap was a win/win, but of course “entrepreneurs” had to turn that into a side business and AirBnB had to maximise profits so it all went to shit.

      • FosterMolasses@leminal.space
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        15 hours ago

        Once again, Late Stage Capitalism in the root problem in all enshittification of an otherwise innocent and slightly innovative idea.

        • buttnugget
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          11 hours ago

          It’s so funny because that’s exactly how capitalism ruins great ideas. I’m actually proud to have never used AirBnB, but when it first came out, it was probably a great way to save vs hotels that were overpriced and have massive overhead anyway.

      • uncouple9831@lemmy.zip
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        16 hours ago

        Sure, they were…but Airbnb is now so old Trump wouldn’t try to fuck it, so why are people still giving them money?

    • AlexLost
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      20 hours ago

      Too many people who should not own and rent investment properties bought investment properties to rent as ABnBs. It broke the spirit of the thing, which was to rent space in your house, not a property used solely for that purpose.

            • AlexLost
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              3 hours ago

              They can pretend they live there. It’s harder than you think. And legislation takes time that a new app development does not. It is also local, so you are talking about thousand of civic governments not in concert with each other, and often playing the game with rental properties themselves.

            • criss_cross
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              13 hours ago

              I would agree.

              I say it less as I know why and more that I know a lot of municipalities (including mine) have laws and codes in place that prevent using properties as hotels, and have had them for years, and yet they still operate.

              So either they’re hard to enforce or they’re understaffed to do so.

    • h3rmit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      17 hours ago

      They have also destroyed rent in lots of places. Here in Spain prices have more than doubled for rent since AirBnB is a thing. Landlords even tell you that they get way more money from airbnb, so supply and demand and all that.

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        11 hours ago

        Supply and demand isn’t really a thing with housing. I understand that Spaniards are upset, but that’s why you tell your socialist government to convert everything to public housing.

      • gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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        12 hours ago

        The way I see it is that enshitification is inherent to late stage capitalism, which has unfortunately become endemic in our culture.

        I suppose that’s a 6/half-dozen distinction, though

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      24 hours ago

      Tbh ive booked no less than 8 airbnbs in the last 3 years and have always had zero issues in any of them. No ridiculous rules or deposits or anything, and a lot more privacy than getting a hotel. More importantly, always far cheaper than getting a hotel that isn’t questionably shitty

      In that same span of time, Ive booked like 4 hotel rooms. One was a four star property that was great but stupid expensive. One was a “3 star” property that was shoddy as fuck, had bedbugs, and refused to give me a refund despite bringing one of the bugs to the front desk and politely declining to be put in another room. The other two hotels were decent but cost more than what they were worth compared to a STR. Hence I roll on with airbnbs

      Why anyone would pay more for less space and less privacy I fail to understand.

      • cogman
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        17 hours ago

        What sort of hotel are you staying at?

        I just looked and the cheapest air BNB in my city is literally someone’s RV for $100 a night.

        In most cities I can grab a room in a nice hotel for $100 to $150 per night. Cheap hotels are more like $80 a night.

      • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        23 hours ago

        Just an FYI, since privacy seems to be a big concern for you… AirBnB used to allow hosts to hide cameras inside of their rented spaces. It was explicitly allowed in their renting rules, under the premise of allowing owners to enforce rules and collect evidence in case of excessive mess/damage/theft. They banned hidden cameras in 2024, but over half of rental owners still admit to using them, and about half of all guests still report finding one inside of their rented spaces if they bother to look.

        • grimWar@sh.itjust.works
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          12 hours ago

          AirBnB never allowed hidden cameras; they allowed visible indoor cameras in common areas like a living room or kitchen. This isn’t to say that some nefarious hosts might have hidden cameras, which has always been an issue, but to say that they explicitly allowed it in their policy is patently false.

          Here’s the archived version of the policy page in 2022: Use of cameras and recording devices

          • sem@piefed.blahaj.zone
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            15 minutes ago

            Just hypothetically speaking, is it against the end user license agreement to use a Wi-Fi jammer?

        • ComfortableRaspberry@feddit.org
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          22 hours ago

          Horror story from Germany: colleague from my former workplace was living a bit after away and always rented local AirBnB locations until she found several hidden cameras, including one in the bedroom. This was before the official ban, but I’m never going to use the platform again.

            • ayyy@sh.itjust.works
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              12 hours ago

              That it was explicitly allowed in the rental agreement for the purpose of collecting evidence of rulebreaking.

                • ayyy@sh.itjust.works
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                  12 hours ago

                  From your link:

                  Historically, Airbnb allowed the use of indoor security cameras in common areas of listings, such as hallways and living rooms, as long as they were disclosed on the listing page before booking, clearly visible and were not located in spaces like sleeping areas and bathrooms.

                  How do you read that and conclude “they explicitly allowed hidden cameras”?

        • ToastedRavioli@midwest.social
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          21 hours ago

          I meant privacy moreso as in coming and going as I please without interacting with anybody or being surrounded by other guests. But that is a valid separate concern I suppose

          • uncouple9831@lemmy.zip
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            16 hours ago

            “I’m chill if strangers watch me sleep, I just don’t want to have to talk to them”…what a world

            • FosterMolasses@leminal.space
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              15 hours ago

              Says something about how awful some people are to interact with when anyone would rather the alternative, doesn’t it?

              • uncouple9831@lemmy.zip
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                15 hours ago

                Well it says something about at least one of the people in the interaction. What it’s saying may be related to seratonin reuptake, but who am I to judge.

        • uncouple9831@lemmy.zip
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          It’s short for string, a data type in pretty much every programming language which traditionally is a length followed by a sequence of characters. Another storage approach used by C is to make strings just the sequence of characters with a 0 value on the end. However this approach was an optimization for 1960s technology which had aged into being a pain in the ass by 1961.

  • qevlarr
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    22 hours ago

    Hostels are the best. Just give me a bed to crash and tomorrow morning I’ll be off again.

    • ChickenLadyLovesLife
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      17 hours ago

      I would love for the Japanese capsule hotels to become a thing here in the US. I’ve always hated paying $150 or whatever for a full room (or suite) during a road trip late at night when all I do is crash out on the bed and then get up and drive first thing the next morning.

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        14 hours ago

        I sleep in my car, often. If I drive until 2 am, and have to be back on the road around 8, I don’t see the point in spending a bunch of dough.

        If I was home, I’d probably be sleeping in my TV chair anyway.

        • ChickenLadyLovesLife
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          13 hours ago

          I wish I could do that but I drive a roadster. Absolutely no fucking way to stretch out comfortably.

          • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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            13 hours ago

            Yeah, a full stretch out doesn’t really work in my van, either, but I can deal with it for a few hours. I can see where a roadster would be absolutely impossible.

            At least your getting good gas mileage. You can use the savings to pay for the room.

            By the way, when I do stay in a motel, I always stay in cheap places like Motel 6 and Super 8. They’ve renovated most of them, and while they aren’t fancy, they’re clean, the beds are comfortable, the shower works, and they have a TV. They usually have a fridge and microwave, but I seldom use them. You can usually find one under $75, and I recently found one for $37!

            • ChickenLadyLovesLife
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              11 hours ago

              At least your getting good gas mileage.

              Lol I get about 16-18 mpg. 6-cylinder engines ain’t fuel efficient even when they’re jammed into a go-kart. For bonus points, the damned thing takes 93 octane.

                • ChickenLadyLovesLife
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                  11 hours ago

                  It’s funny, I also own a used school bus and that gets barely worse mileage than the roadster.

      • Alcoholicorn@mander.xyz
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        16 hours ago

        Weirdly, the capsule hotels tend to be more expensive than traditional hostels, and that’s for 150 dudes in a room.

      • qevlarr
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        15 hours ago

        Capsule offers no benefit over regular bunk beds. I’ve been in both but I try to avoid capsule now. You don’t even save that much space, people still need to get in and out of their space anyways. But getting to your bed from the short end is just a damn hassle

    • SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org
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      18 hours ago

      Last hostel I stayed at in Berlin (the one with the cool painted facade they were forced to change) the bathroom was so small I had to sit sideways on the toilet. Was still a fine room to be honest.

      • markovs_gun
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        13 hours ago

        As opposed to Airbnbs which ask guests to clean their own sheets and I guess use the honor system that they actually did it.

      • Falafelicious@lemmy.zip
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        1 day ago

        I forgot where I saw it, but someone took a blacklight to Hilton Hampton Inn and then to a airbnb in the same area of Chicago, and the Hilton was way cleaner. Think it was on tiktok. Most Hiltons I’ve stayed in are spotless. Except one time in South Bend Indiana, the DoubleTree, one of the worst hotels I’ve ever been too.

        • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          23 hours ago

          Yeah, I’ve done the black light check at hotels before. I was pleasantly surprised.

          One tip though: They don’t usually change the top comforter in between guests. They’ll typically change the sheets, but the comforter is only changed on a regular (typically weekly) schedule. But they’ll be happy to change it for you if you ask.

          Unless it’s a honeymoon suite. That shit all gets changed in between every guest, for obvious reasons.

        • arrow74@lemmy.zip
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          22 hours ago

          At least in the southeast US, Hiltons are hit and miss. Holiday Inn Express is the most consistent in my expirence.

          • limelight79
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            16 hours ago

            I’ve stayed in a lot of hotels all around the US (and a few abroad), ranging from 1 to 5 stars. I’ve found that the age of the hotel is the primary factor in the quality of the room.

            It seems like they build them nicely, but then never seem to have (or want to spend) the money to maintain them. There are exceptions, certainly, but I’ve seen maintenance issues even in high end hotels.