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OpenTravel Alliance

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Maintenance Release ONLY, please use DEX from utilities. OpenTravel Development Environment - Model Designer. Design information models in a standalone Eclipse-based IDE, share them in a repository…

Applications and utilities for model developers to use in conjunction with the OTM-DE.

OTM Model Compiler and Repository

OTM-DE Documentation

OpenTravel web site application for the publication and comment submission of OTA technical specifications.

JavaFX OTM-DE application -MOVED to utiltilites

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Ansible playbooks that support the installation and maintenance of OTM repositories.

Maintenance Release ONLY, please use DEX from utilities. OpenTravel Development Environment - Model Designer. Design information models in a standalone Eclipse-based IDE, share them in a repository, and compile them to create XML Schemas, WSDL and XML examples.

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Open Travel Alliance (OTA)

  • The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA)

The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) is a self-funded, non-profit organization comprised of major airlines, hoteliers, car rental companies, leisure suppliers, travel agencies, global distribution systems, technology providers, and other interested parties working to create and implement industry-wide, open e-business specifications. These specifications form a common e-business language are intended to encourage development of systems to create new collections of services to better meet the demands and expectations of travelers and the travel industry.

OTA XML specific vocabularies

More information: OTA website .

Context for The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA)

Related articles for the opentravel alliance (ota).

  • AdsML Consortium
  • Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions (ATIS)
  • Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium (CDISC)
  • FIX Protocol Limited (FPL)
  • HR-XML Consortium
  • IDEAlliance
  • Interactive Financial eXchange Forum (IFX Forum)
  • International Press Telecommunications Council (IPTC)
  • International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA)
  • Meat & Poultry Data Standards Organization (mpXML)
  • Mortgage Industry Standards Maintenance Organization (MISMO)
  • National Information Exchange Model (NIEM)
  • Open Financial Exchange (OFX) Consortium
  • Parlay Group
  • Petroleum Industry Data Exchange (PIDX)
  • PSLX Consortium
  • Real Estate Transaction Standard (RETS)
  • Research Information eXchange Markup Language (RIXML).org
  • Software & Information Industry Association (SIIA)

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Douglas K Barry

Barry & Associates, Inc.

The Savvy Manager's Guide

Douglas K Barry is also the author of a book that explains Web Services, service-oriented architecture, and Cloud Computing in an easy-to-understand, non-technical manner.

Web Services, Service-Oriented Architectures, and Cloud Computing: The Savvy Manager's Guide

Web Services, Service-Oriented Architectures, and Cloud Computing: The Savvy Manager's Guide ( Second Edition )

by Douglas K Barry with David Dick

This is a guide for the savvy manager who wants to capitalize on the wave of change that is occurring with Web Services, service-oriented architecture, and—more recently—Cloud Computing. The changes wrought by these technologies will require both a basic grasp of the technologies and an effective way to deal with how these changes will affect the people who build and use the systems in our organizations. This book covers both issues. Managers at all levels of all organizations must be aware of both the changes that we are now seeing and ways to deal with issues created by those changes.

ota open travel alliance

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  • Schema Products
  • Implementer Support
  • Current Work
  • Join Open Travel

Download here - 965 KB zip

Description

As of June, 2014, the Code List contained 150 tables with a combined 5,598 code table items in an MS-Excel spreadsheet that is included in the XML product zip file and available as a separate download on this page for OpenTravel members and the public.

Announcements

In January, 2015, OpenTravel released phase I of the optimized code table which will eventually replace the original code table.  The Code List Optimization team reviewed 87 of the 149 existing code lists beginning with lists that are referenced in the hotel messages.  The team created code list defintions for each list that was reviewed, and in some cases also created usage guidelines to help implementers determine how each list should be used.  The optimized code list is included in the code list download that can be accessed via the link on this page.  The team completed a project brief  that among other things details the procedures followed during the reivew, the changes made to the lists, and identifies which lists have been completed to date.  OpenTravel members can learn more or subscribe to updates at the Code List Optimization Project .

Download Here

[May 25, 2001] OpenTravel is an open 'syntax' standard that takes communication down to the individual data element level and allows two parties to communicate individual data elements in any order and quantity that they wish. OpenTravel travel standards are intended to create new opportunities for travel agencies as the cost to communicate directly with a supplier for information will be greatly reduced and standardized using a common, widely used, proven protocol. With access to a wider variety of more readily available travel supplier information, agencies will be able to better serve their clients. For the GDSs (also known as computer reservation systems), we believe OpenTravel standards will afford new opportunities as well. Developing and maintaining current messaging standards is expensive and uses highly specialized programming. The OTA currently has over 150 members from the Airline, Hotel, Car Rental, Leisure, and other travel industry companies. Some companies included as OTA members are American Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Continental Airlines, Hilton Hotels, Hyatt Hotels, Marriott Hotels, ANC Rental, Avis Rent A Car, Budget Rent-A-Car, and many software developers and affiliated companies in the travel industry... The OTA specification uses the eXtensible Markup Language (XML) that allows for the exchange of structured data as well as processing instructions over the Internet or other means of transport."

With XML, "OTA defined a common vocabulary of data items in terms of elements, attributes, or reusable entities. Logical groups of data elements are represented by schema fragments that provide formal specification of semantics and data typing that allows the schema fragments to be combined into message structures as needed. With the recent promotion of XML Schema as a Recommendation from the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) on 2001-05-02, OTA has developed schema files for the messaging components and profile content data found in this specification, making it available for implementation. Parties may also choose to validate messages using a document type definition (DTD) that defines the hierarchical arrangement of data items according to a set of rules. In either case, separate DTD or schema specifies basic error conditions and administrative messages independent of the versioned specifications.

"The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) is currently recruiting travel industry organizations as it begins critical ground-breaking work for developing communications standards that will allow for the efficient and effective exchange of travel industry information via the Internet. One of the OTA's first assignments is to create a directory of industry terms used in XML via the Internet. This directory will be the ultimate gateway for the seamless exchange of data..."

"As the administrator, DISA will serve as the primary source for OTA information with responsibility for the organization's everyday management, including membership, meeting coordination, finances and website maintenance. A soon-to-be announced Standards Manager from DISA will coordinate efforts with an array of groups, exploring the use of eXtensible Markup Language (XML) to describe a common framework for interchanging document structure grammars between businesses. The Standards Manager will also provide the technical and architectural guidance of an XML specialist. The alliance's membership is comprised of influential names in all sectors of the travel industry, including air, car, hotel, travel agencies, technology providers and other travel related suppliers. Currently, OTA operates as five working groups - air, car, hotel, leisure supplier, and non-supplier - and has an interoperability committee to coordinate their efforts. Each group will develop 'open' standards, creating Internet-compatible messages by defining data terms in XML...."

[May 25, 2001]     New OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) Specification Supports Cross-Industry Availability and Booking Capabilities.     More than 140 leaders representing all aspects of the travel industry recently met for an OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) Advisory Forum and approved the release of a new draft customer profile specification. Version 2001A of the OpenTravel Alliance Message Specifications document "merges the OTA and Hospitality Industry Technology Integration Standards (HITIS) respective customer profiles into one comprehensive profile to expedite the imminent adoption of this new OTA specification. The Version 2001A public release also includes a major infrastructure change that incorporates emerging Extensible Markup Language (XML) capabilities: it adopts a portion of the messaging structure developed by the Electronic Business XML (ebXML) Transport, Routing and Packaging project team. Version 2001B has also been released for member review; it includes the complete set of revised HITIS standards for the hotel industry coupled with availability and booking specifications to serve airline, car rental, package holidays from consumer to supplier, and travel insurance industries. The OTA specifications now include the principal specification document, W3C XML Schema and schema fragments conforming to the W3C Candidate Recommendation, XML DTDs, UML Model diagrams, and a data dictionary. The OTA's five working groups, together with an interoperability committee to coordinate their efforts, are developing open Internet-compatible messages using XML data terms: air, car, hotel, leisure supplier, and non-supplier." [ Full context ]

[August 11, 2000] The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) has announced the publication of its version 1.0 specifications for the travel industry. The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) is a consortium of suppliers of travel services -- airline, hotel, car rental, passenger rail, travel arrangers, leisure -- and companies that provide distribution and technology support to the industry. The distribution package includes 'versioned' and 'non-versioned' XML message DTDs. From the executive summary: "The OpenTravel Alliance Message Specification, version 1 (OTA version 1) provides a common customer profile that travelers can fill out once and exchange among various travel services over the Internet. The specification provides a uniform vocabulary that captures and exchanges data on a traveler's identity, affiliations including employer, loyalty programs, forms of payment, travel documents, and detailed travel preferences. A key feature of the profile allows customers to define collections of travel preferences in terms of their own travel plans and experiences, and includes preferences for various travel services (air, hotel, car rental, other) as well as common preferences across services. The specification allows for straightforward preferences as well as collections meeting complex conditions, including choices to avoid. OTA version 1 also allows customers to identify related travelers, such as family members, companions, or fellow business colleagues, and link to their profiles. The OTA specification uses the Extensible Markup Language (XML) that allows for the exchange of structured data -- the kind of data stored in databases -- as well as processing instructions over the Web. With XML, OTA defined a common vocabulary in terms of data items called elements, attributes, or reusable entities reflected in unique tags that identify the data in messages. The hierarchical structure of these data items in a set of electronic rules is called a document type definition (DTD) that allows parties exchanging customer profiles to validate the messages. A separate DTD specifies basic error conditions and administrative messages independent of OTA's specification versions. OTA version 1 specifies that parties send profile messages as pairs of requests with corresponding responses. The messages contain four basic functions: (1) creating a profile, (2) reading a profile, (3) updating a profile, and (4) deleting a profile. The update process is the most complex and can address individual parts of the profile record. The other functions address the profile record as a whole. The specification provides tag-naming conventions, which include the version and hierarchy of the elements in each tag. OTA version 1 recommends security features providing authentication of parties, confidentiality, and integrity of messages, and provides a control section in each message, separate from the business content, for these security features. The specification also has strict privacy requirements that lets the customer indicate which data to share with other parties, even for routine functions like keeping all copies of the profile on remote sites identical with the original."

[March 01, 2000] A recent announcement from the OpenTravel Alliance describes the first public release of an XML messaging specification and DTD, now available for comment. "Charged with crafting Internet specifications based on the Extensible Markup Language (XML), the OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) released today a draft of its first specification for public comment. OTA version 1 tackles the complex subject of customer profiles that cuts across travel industry sectors. This first specification demonstrates the ability of OTA's infrastructure and process to achieve this goal, and do it quickly. 'OTA's specification will enhance communication among all components of the travel industry businesses and travelers and help meet the expectations of customers in today's virtual marketplace,' said OTA Board Chairman Jim Young of Continental Airlines. 'As we extend the scope in version 2 and beyond, trading partners will be able to exchange more trip-centric information in ways that create new and better-tailored services for individual travelers.' OTA developed the specification with a key objective of letting customers enter their basic data and travel preferences just once, no matter how many travel suppliers and intermediaries are involved in a trip. Achieving this goal required OTA to create a common vocabulary for the travel industry, taking advantage of the extensible nature of XML that still allows for more growth later if needed. A live demonstration of OTA version 1 messages shows that travel companies can begin using the specification right away. The demonstration, accessible from the OTA web site, www.opentravel.org, lets visitors create, read, update and delete simple customer profiles with valid XML messages. McCord Travel and Airline Automation Inc. developed the demonstration on behalf of OTA. OTA, which only began in May 1999, now has over 100 members representing influential names in all sectors of the travel industry, including air, car rental, hotel, travel agencies, technology providers and related suppliers. The Alliance is comprised of five working groups air, car, hotel, leisure supplier, and non-supplier together, with an interoperability committee to coordinate their efforts. OTA defined its open messages with XML, the new high-powered language that makes it possible to exchange business data seamlessly among different systems, companies, and industries over the World Wide Web."

Principal References

  • OpenTravel Alliance Home Page
  • OTA specifications
  • OTA FAQ document
  • OTA Organizational Structure . Work Groups, Subcommittees, Project Teams.
  • Data Interchange Standards Association (DISA) website
  • OpenTravel Alliance Best Practices . 15 pages. August 23, 2002 (or later). [ cache ]
  • "Hospitality Industry Technology Integration Standards (HITIS) Project."

General: News, Articles, Papers, Reports

[May 4, 2005] "Continental and America West Lead Charge For Travel XML Spec." By Tony Kontzer. From InformationWeek (May 4, 2005). "Airline officials told attendees at the Open Travel Alliance's advisory forum that their companies are putting the OTA spec to use for bookings, simplifying distribution, and simplifying links with car-rental companies and travel agencies. Continental Airlines and America West Airlines have emerged as aggressive adopters of a new XML specification developed by the Open Travel Alliance, a 6-year-old industry standards organization. Officials from the airlines told attendees at the OTA's advisory forum in Dallas on Wednesday that their companies are putting the spec to use for bookings, simplifying distribution, and streamlining links with car-rental companies and travel agencies... Continental is in the process of migrating an existing XML connection into its reservation system to the OTA spec. The connection is for business partner Patheo Inc., which provides technology that facilitates transactions between travel suppliers and travel resellers... America West, meanwhile, is on a similar path. Its first OTA-compliant direct connect was with its leisure-trip-packaging unit, America West Vacations. It's also preparing to provide its line of Web sites with the OTA's XML schema so they can connect into the airline's reservations system however they choose, said Chris Stanley, senior director of electronic distribution. So far, the XML messages it's supporting with the OTA spec includes queries for schedule availability, pricing and booking, and requests for passenger-name records data..."

[May 3, 2005] "Momentum Builds Behind Travel-Industry XML Specification." By Tony Kontzer. From InformationWeek (May 3, 2005). "During a recent Dallas forum for its members, leaders of the Open Travel Alliance said that growing numbers of travel companies are migrating from proprietary XML interfaces to the alliance's standard, even though a plan to roll out a certification program has been delayed. [This] standard XML messaging specification is picking up momentum in the travel industry, promising improved connectivity between business partners, better packaging of travel products and services, and lower distribution costs... OTA chairman Jim Young, senior VP of global distribution for Intercontinental Hotels Group, told an audience of more than 200 of the 6-year-old alliance's travel-industry members. The forum was being held in conjunction with research firm PhoCusWright's Travdex travel technology conference. Still, the cooperation isn't without kinks. The delay is due not only to unexpected liability and administrative costs, but also because of reticence among some members to publish profiles detailing their use of the spec. The alliance's XML spec is designed to facilitate the exchange of information between travel companies as the industry works to improve the ability of its customers to research and book all aspects of a trip in a single online transaction. After years of building industrywide interest, developing the specs, and, more recently, attempting to synch those specs with those offered being developed by similar organizations representing specific sectors such as airlines, hotels, and car-rental companies, tales of adoption abounded at the forum. Companies such as Marriott International, Sabre Holdings, Cendant, and Hertz Rent-A-Car have published their implementations of the OTA spec for others to learn from. Expedia Inc.'s Newtrade travel commerce unit has adopted the spec to ease communication with partners. And leisure-travel specialist LibGo Travel Inc. has adopted the OTA spec and is attempting to get as many of its partners to adopt it, too. For those partners who haven't done so, LibGo has built translators that convert incoming messages into the OTA XML schema as a temporary stopgap, CIO Danny Hudson said during a panel discussion..."

[February 22, 2005] "OTA and APEX Partner for Common Standards." - "The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) and the Accepted Practices Exchange (APEX) are Supporting the Travel, Meetings, Conventions and Exhibitions Industries OTA and APEX, two closely related industry organizations, are coordinating their efforts to standardize data interchange and streamline the way the travel industry and the meetings, conventions and exhibitions industry do business. Together their goal is to develop XML schemas for their respective industries, parts of which have common elements that can be developed in concert. OTA, a non-profit open alliance, is focused on the travel industry as a whole entity, such as airlines, hotels, car rental companies and other travel and technology related organizations. An initiative of the Convention Industry Council, APEX concentrates on event organizers, hotels and other venues, convention and visitors bureaus and related-industry needs. APEX and OTA intend to further cross-industry coordination and are expanding data exchange standards for easier, faster and cheaper communications among business partners. As of Friday, February 4, 2005, the Convention Industry Council is a member of OTA. That membership will facilitate increased involvement and partnership across the industry. Work continues strong in both organizations. In December 2003, OTA published its 2004B Specification for XML, which includes many hotel XML schema that is currently being implemented. Almost simultaneously, APEX published its industry glossary, which has set the stage for future data definitions, and the APEX Post-Event Report, which defines the standard data elements for a post-event report..."

[July 28, 2003] "Sabre Travel Network Launches Web Services Capabilities for Agents. New Offering Provides Standard, Industry-Accepted, Easy-to-Use Technology to Access Sabre Global Distribution System Products and Capabilities." - " Sabre Travel Network , a Sabre Holdings company, today announced the roll out of its Sabre Web Services offering. This new offering provides travel agents easier, faster and more flexible access to the Sabre Global Distribution System (GDS) using industry-accepted OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) standards. It enables agencies to reduce development time for new and enhanced offerings, thereby cutting costs, speeding time to market for new sources of revenue, improving customer loyalty and assuring competitive advantage. In the past, customers gained access to the Sabre GDS and those of other travel providers in a variety of ways using multiple languages and forms of connectivity. Now Sabre Web Services (making use of leading-edge XML and SOAP technologies) streamlines that process, offering developers a single standards-based access to the GDS. This eliminates the need for agents and Web developers to understand proprietary codes and programming languages to connect their systems to the disparate data sources needed to create bookable Web-based travel offerings. 'We were able to link our dynamic packaging engine to the Sabre Web Services platform with ease,' said Rakesh Mishra, president of HyperTech Solutions, a Sabre Travel Network customer which provides dynamic packaging and remote connectivity technology to the travel industry. 'Sabre Web Services' features are fantastic, and the rapid development cycle brought our revised product to market 30 percent faster, while allowing us to price our products even more competitively. It's been 'win-win-win' -- for Sabre Travel Network, for HyperTech and for our tour operator customers!' HyperTech develops Internet booking engines and Web-based solutions for tour operators and air consolidators... An agency planning to build a Web site with travel booking capabilities can easily access the Sabre GDS via Sabre Web Services and select specific services to meet their individual business needs. For example, one agency may use geographic displays of available hotels, while another may opt for a more streamlined text view of available hotels. By selecting Sabre Web Services, rather than off-the-shelf booking tools, agencies gain maximum control over the creation of their customer-facing booking tools... Sabre Travel Network, a Sabre Holdings company, provides access to the world's leading global distribution system (GDS) and products and services enabling agents at more than 56,000 locations worldwide to be travel experts. About 35 percent of the world's travel is booked through the Sabre GDS. Originally developed in 1960, it was the first system to connect the buyers and sellers of travel. Today the system includes more than 400 airlines, approximately 60,000 hotels, 53 car rental companies, nine cruise lines, 36 railroads and 232 tour operators..."

[June 10, 2003]     OpenTravel Alliance Releases OTA Specification Version 2003A for Travel Related Services.     The OpenTravel Alliance has announced the publication of its OTA Specification Version 2003A which "provides the travel industry and travel related services the ability to deliver new features and enhanced capabilities to travelers, through enhanced XML transactions." OTA is a non-profit organization of more than 150 members from major airlines, hoteliers, car rental companies, leisure suppliers, travel agencies, global distribution systems (GDS), technology providers and other interested parties, working to create and implement industry-wide, open e-business specifications." The OTA 2003A Specification XML Message Sets package contains 140 XML Schemas corresponding to events and activities in various travel sectors. Sections 2-10 of the principal Open Travel Alliance Schema Descriptions and Examples document describe message sets from several groups and profiles, including the Air Working Group, Car Working Group, Hotel Working Group, Insurance, Package Tours/Holiday Bookings, Travel Itinerary Messages, Rail Messages, Loyalty Messages, and Generic Messages. The Version 2003A specification provides enhancements and introduces three new message pairs: (1) OTA Insurance Plan Search Messages supports a method for insurance agents and third party vendors to obtain a list of available insurance products and perform searches to find insurance products that meet certain requirements, e.g. , length of coverage, number of travelers, residence/citizenship restrictions, form insurance company or intermediary; (2) OTA Hotel Request for Proposal (RFP) and Request for Information (RFI) Messages allow for automation of RFP/RFI in the Group/Meeting or Tour/Wholesale business, and for acknowledgement of request receipt; (3) OTA Hotel Reservation Modify Messages accommodates a full overlay of a reservation for the purpose of making a change to an existing confirmed booking. Additional business scenario and instance documents have been supplied to assist companies in implementing the OTA specification.

[December 30, 2002] "OpenTravel Alliance Announces Publication of OTA Specification Version 2002B." - " The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) is pleased to announce the publication of the 2002B Specification that provides the travel industry and travel related services the ability to deliver new features and enhanced capabilities to travelers, through enhanced XML transactions. The 2002B release enhances messages previously released, as well as, introduces new messages across all of the work groups. The Air, Car, Hotel and Travel Integration Work Groups have each provided an introduction to highlight new features and enhancements offered in the 2002B Specification. OTA would like to thank all its 120 member companies, project teams, working groups and committees that worked so diligently to provide a richer, more robust specification and further travel technology and XML development. Thanks to this effort, the OTA is one step closer to its goal to create a common and complete XML dialect for the travel industry..."

[November 20, 2002]     OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) Publishes XML Specification Version 2002B.     The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) has announced a Version 2002B release of its Extensible Markup Language (XML) specification for public review and comment. OTA develops XML-based communications specifications to support the efficient and effective exchange of travel industry information via the Internet. This Version 2002B specification "expands on the messages previously published, offering additional opportunities for trading partners within the travel industry to communicate with one another." Messages have been re-defined according to OTA's published Best Practices Guidelines for all of its XML data assets. The general OTA guideline approach is "to maximize component (elements/attributes) reuse for the highly diverse and yet closely related travel industry data; this is accomplished by building messages via context-driven component assembly. The application of best practices design and the re-definition of the XML component constructs to the specification supports a path of seamless integration and enhanced interoperability within all disciplines of the travel sector. With over 150 members representing influential names in all sectors of the travel industry, OTA is comprised of representatives from the airlines, car rental firms, hotels, leisure suppliers, service providers, tour operators, travel agencies, and trade associations. Together with an OTA interoperability committee to coordinate WG efforts, the OTA working groups develop open Internet-compatible messages using XML."

OTA 2002A Specification. A 'Final' OTA 2002A Message Specification was released August 23, 2002. It presents a brief description [24 pages] of the OTA 2002A Specification RQ/RS message pairs. The 2002A Specification "marks the initial application of the 2001C OTA Best Practices section to the complete OTA message payload and fragment documents, namely 2001B and 2001C message documents. In the process, OTA has reviewed every component developed within 2001B and 2001C message sets to address both the interoperability of the components and to maximize the reusability and extension of these components. This provides for a better, more complete solution for all OTA messages. The OTA 2002A Specification is published as a PDF document that describes the XML-based message sets, together with a ZIP archive that contains the actual XML message sets."

[June 26, 2002]     OpenTravel Alliance XML Specification Supports Multiple Travel Verticals.     An announcement from the OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) describes a public review release of the enhanced Version 2002A XML Message Specification. This version of the OTA specification "addresses multiple levels of interoperability across the travel verticals, enabling organizations of all sizes to implement complex online transactions. It incorporates cross-industry components such as customer, payment and flight arrival information in many of the OTA messages so that travel trading partners will more easily be able to communicate essential traveler information." New release materials include an overview document and a collection of some 103 OTA XML Schema Definition files. "With over 150 members representing influential names in all sectors of the travel industry, OTA is comprised of representatives from the airlines, car rental firms, hotels, leisure suppliers, service providers, tour operators, travel agencies, and trade associations. OTA working groups, together with an OTA interoperability committee to coordinate their efforts, develop open Internet-compatible messages using XML." The review period ends July 19, 2002 and final publication of this OTA specification is scheduled for July 31, 2002. [ Full context ]

  • OpenTravel Alliance 2002A Message Specification . Public Review Draft 3. OpenTravel Alliance, Inc. Prepared in partnership with Data Interchange Standards Association ( DISA ). 21-June-2002. 23 pages. [ cache ]

[October 15, 2002] "Expedia Books Itself a Hotel Deal." By Troy Wolverton. In CNET News.com (October 15, 2002). "Hotels could soon find it easier to sell rooms online, thanks to an acquisition announced on Tuesday by online travel company Expedia. Expedia is purchasing Newtrade Technologies, a Montreal-based software development company. Newtrade is developing an XML-based system that will allow hotels to send information about their room availability and pricing to various distribution networks via the Internet. Expedia and Newtrade plan to introduce the new technology early next year, the companies said... Part of the problem hotels have faced is that unlike airfares, which are largely distributed online, lodging information has generally been distributed via fax to companies such as Expedia or to global distribution systems, said Jared Blank, an online travel analyst for Jupiter Research. It's been done that way for a long time, and the distribution companies have had little incentive to change, he said. Newtrade's system may not be an immediate incentive for distributors to change their ways, but it could help Expedia itself get access to a wider selection of rooms and rates, Blank said Newtrade's technology will work with other companies besides just Expedia, Charlier said. Because it is based on XML (Extensible Markup Language), Newtrade's software will be able to connect the various systems used by hotels to manage their room inventory with the systems used by the various distribution networks, she said..." ['Newtrade has developed and implemented XML interfaces that conform to OTA specifications, ensuring seamless connectivity between hotel legacy systems and the multiple points of distribution. Using Web services, their solutions connect to a travel supplier's inventory management system, provide yield and rate management capabilities and handle software, hardware and networking issues to lower infrastructure and operating costs.'] See details in the announcement: "Expedia, Inc. to Acquire Newtrade Technologies Inc. Acquisition will fuel Newtrade's development of innovative open-standard technology for electronic distribution of hotel rates and availability."

[February 28, 2002]     OpenTravel Alliance Publishes XML Specifications Supporting Travel Industry Messaging.     The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) has announced the publication of Versions 2001B and 2001C of its Extensible Markup Language (XML) specifications, which "help all sectors of travel communicate more efficiently and effectively by simplifying the implementation and transmission of complex electronic transactions." The 2001B Message Specification "presents the specifications for the exchange of messages in the travel industry, covering travel services for airlines, car rentals, hotels, and travel insurance. It uses the XML for the exchange of these messages transmitted under Internet protocols. The 2001C Messages document contains Air Availability messages, Package Tours messages, and Golf Tee Times messages. This Infrastructure document also specifies a mapping for the distribution of OTA messages on top of ebXML messaging, and provides the framework for all OTA messages by completing the OTA Best Practices section. The OTA has chosen XML as the vehicle for its specifications, determining that it offers a common framework flexible enough to be used between systems throughout the travel industry." The new OTA specifications build upon ebXML, W3C, ISO, and IATA standards. [ Full context ]

  • Announcement 2002-02026: "New OpenTravel Alliance XML Specifications Unite Travel Industry, Simplify Online Transactions and Reduce Costs"
  • Message Specification 2001B Supporting Documentation [ cache ]
  • Message Specification 2001B XML Schema files [ cache ]
  • 2001C Infrastructure Documentation [ cache ]
  • 2001C Messages Documentation [ cache ]
  • 2001C XML Schema files [ cache ]

[January 10, 2002]     New OpenTravel Alliance XML Specification Supports ebXML-OTA Mapping.     The OpenTravel Alliance recently announced the release of an OTA Version 2001C XML Specification, available for public review through January 31, 2002. The new version includes the mapping of OTA payloads onto an ebXML framework, consistent with OTA's recommendation of ebXML "as a viable infrastructure for the exchange of OTA messages across private and public networks." Two prose documents have been published along with the new XML Schemas, sample instances, and best-practices information: (1) The OpenTravel Alliance 2001C Infrastructure Specification "presents the specifications for the underlying infrastructure for the exchange of messages in the travel industry, covering travel services for airlines, car rentals, hotels, and travel insurance. It uses the Extensible Markup Language (XML) for the exchange of these messages transmitted under Internet protocols and includes a detailed mapping onto ebXML Message Services. (2) The OpenTravel Alliance 2001C Message Specification "presents the specifications for the Air Availability RQ/RS message pairs, the Package Tours RQ/RS message pairs, and the Golf Tee Times RQ/RS message pairs. The OTA working groups, together with an OTA interoperability committee to coordinate their efforts, develop open Internet-compatible messages using XML." [ Full context ]

[October 02, 2001]     OpenTravel Alliance Releases Version 2001A Combined Specification for Hospitality and Travel Industries.     The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) has released today Version 2001A of its specification, complete with XML DTDs, W3C XML Schemas, and supporting prose documentation. The XML-based OTA specification provides for the exchange of messages in the travel industry, covering airlines, car rentals, hotels, and other travel services. Part I "describes the base technical architecture used by the OpenTravel Alliance for message exchanges, including transport protocols, identification and connections to trading partners, security and privacy, and infrastructure required to identify the message content and route it to the proper application handler. Part II addresses the travel business content and exchanges of a customer profile, and identifies relevant message sets. Merging the OTA and Hospitality Industry Technology Integration Standards (HITIS) respective customer profiles, the OTA unites the requirements of both hospitality and travel industries into one comprehensive specification. Unifying a historically fractured process, OTA converges and capitalizes on the communication process between the players in this industry by harnessing the power behind Extensible Markup Language (XML). OTA Version 2001A enhances the use of World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) XML schemas and adopts a portion of the messaging structure developed by the ebXML Transport, Routing and Packaging project team. In the coming months, OTA will complete work on two specifications, supporting such cross-industry norms as the ebXML infrastructure and SOAP messaging. Additionally, OTA will release for public review in spring 2002 a specification that will become the foundation for all future messaging in the travel industry." [ Full context ]

[August 11, 2000] 'Final' V1 specification, 2000-08. - OTA v1 Messages Specification, final. All files in one zip file including examples. See (1) OpenTravel Alliance version 1 specification [10 July 2000, OTA_v1.dtd] and (2) OpenTravel Alliance version 1 specification [Non-versioned messages, 10 July 2000, OTA_Nv.dtd].

[August 11, 2000] OpenTravel Alliance Message Specifications, Version 1. Volume 1, Specifications Document . Prepared in partnership with Data Interchange Standards Association. 10-July-2000. 120 pages. "This document presents the specifications for customer profile messages in the travel industry, covering airlines, car rentals, hotels, and other travel services. It uses the Extensible Markup Language (XML) for the exchange of these messages transmitted under Internet protocols. The specifications include mandatory requirements and recommendations for these messages, covering security and privacy, the base technical architecture, travel business content, and administrative exchanges."

[August 11, 2000] OpenTravel Alliance Message Specifications -- Version 1. Volume 2. Appendices. Prepared in partnership with Data Interchange Standards Association. 10-July-2000. Contains Document type definitions, Additional Update process examples, Attribute/ element cross reference chart, Additional hotel attributes, Excerpts from Standard for Internet Commerce, RFC 2119, References, Change log.

  • OTA v1 Messages Specification (ZIP archive); [ local archive copy ]
  • OTA v1 Messages Specification (PDF)
  • OTA v1 Appendices (PDF)
  • OTA v1 DTD 'OpenTravel Alliance version 1 specification, 28 February 2000.' [ local archive copy ]

[August 01, 2001] "OpenTravel Alliance Endorses ebXML." - "Industry support for ebXML continues to build as the international travel consortium, OpenTravel Alliance (OTA), announced endorsement of ebXML in its new specification. ebXML, sponsored by UN/CEFACT and OASIS, provides a standard method to exchange messages, conduct trading relationships, communicate data in common terms and define and register business processes. OTA released for member review new specifications for requesting availability and booking reservations in the airline and car rental industries. These OTA specifications unite OTA and Hospitality Industry Technology Integration Standards (HITIS) respective customer profiles into one comprehensive profile. In conjunction with the Travel Technology Initiative, (TTI), based in the United Kingdom, OTA also released draft specifications that provide a message exchange between wholesalers and tour operators for booking holiday package tours. These specifications will utilize the ebXML secure messaging structure as a recommended reference envelope layer that provides OTA specification users with a unified, interoperable solution. OTA's next publication, projected for November 2001, will map the OTA infrastructure to the ebXML Message Handling Service specification, v1.0. 'Industry groups developing their own XML-based specifications can't operate as islands. Cross-industry communication is as important as exchanging messages within a community,'" explained OTA President Mike Kistner, Vice President and Chief Information Officer for Best Western International. 'By recommending ebXML, we ensure that OTA messages adhere to the international standard and enable implementations of OTA specifications to meet the requirements of the global marketplace.' [And] 'Endorsement by OTA is a major milestone for ebXML. The travel industry joins other communities who have integrated ebXML, including automotive, information technology, electronic components and semiconductor manufacturing and retail,'" noted Bill Smith of Sun Microsystems, president of OASIS and member of the ebXML Executive Committee. Smith referenced similar announcements of ebXML support from Covisint, the Global Commerce Initiative (GCI), Open Applications Group and RosettaNet... The OpenTravel Alliance develops communications specifications to allow for the efficient and effective exchange of travel industry information via the Internet. With over 150 members representing influential names in all sectors of the travel industry, OTA is comprised of representatives from the airlines, car rental agencies, hotels, leisure suppliers, non-suppliers, tour operators, and trade associations. These travel industries, together with an OTA interoperability committee to coordinate their efforts, are developing open Internet-compatible messages using XML data terms." See "Electronic Business XML Initiative (ebXML)."

[October 23, 2000] "AH&MA And OTA Reach Final Agreement On Cooperation." - "The American Hotel and Motel Association (AH&MA) and the OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) have finalized their agreement for cooperation in developing technology standards for the hospitality and travel industry. Under the terms of a definitive agreement reached, AH&MA will make its Central Reservation System (CRS) and Golf Tee-Time Standards available to OTA, which will undertake all future development in these areas. In a continuing process, OTA will provide its further development to AH&MA for inclusion within its American National Standards Institute (ANSI) process. Within that process, AH&MA will seek public comment and accreditation of its Hospitality Industry Technology Integration Standards (HITIS) including those OTA specifications addressing the hospitality CRS environment. This five-year agreement provides for ongoing cooperation in the development of technology standards within the hospitality industry. AH&MA and OTA have agreed to exchange committee seats in each other's technical working committees and at the respective board levels. In addition, AH&MA has granted OTA a non-exclusive license to use the HITIS standards as the foundation for its CRS Specification, while AH&MA will continue development within Phase II of its standards. Planned Phase II HITIS standards include: (1) Payment Processing & Accounting; (2) Food, Beverage & Retail Management; (3) Casino Management & Player Tracking; (4) Smart Card Technology; (5) Legacy System Interfaces. In addition to integrating the HITIS CRS Standards, OTA will be responsible for all other development within the hospitality CRS domain. AH&MA, founded in 1910, is a federation of state lodging associations throughout the United States, with some 11,000 property members worldwide, representing more than 1.4 million rooms. AH&MA provides operations, technical, educational, marketing, and communications services plus governmental affairs representation to the lodging industry. OTA, which began in May 1999, now has over 150 members representing influential names in all sectors of the travel industry, including air, car rental, hotel, travel agencies, technology providers and related suppliers. The Alliance is comprised of five working groups air, car, hotel, leisure supplier, and non-supplier together with an interoperability committee to coordinate their efforts. OTA defined its open messages with XML that makes it possible to exchange business data seamlessly among different systems, companies, and industries over the World Wide Web."

HITIS/OTA Agreement - Contact Robert Elliott

[September 27, 2000] "Airlines turn to XML to try to fix e-ticket transfer problems." By Michael Meehan. In ComputerWorld (September 25, 2000). "After a summer plagued by record numbers of delayed and cancelled flights, the top U.S. airlines have decided to try to fix the clunky links between their individual electronic-ticketing systems in an effort to make it easier for stranded passengers who don't have paper tickets to rebook flights with a different carrier. Jim Young, managing director for cost measurement and distribution strategy at Continental Airlines Inc. in Houston, said here last week that an XML-based standard for sharing electronic-ticket information is being developed by the OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) travel-industry trade association. Young is the chairman of the OTA, which includes all of the leading international airlines, computerized reservations systems and hotel chains. At the eTravelWorld conference, Young said the OTA is looking to fast-track the XML interoperability standard in hopes of eliminating one of the major impediments blocking a full conversion to electronic tickets. A draft of the standard is expected by year's end, and Young said a finished version could be in place before next summer's travel season starts. Currently, passengers who have electronic tickets have to wait in line to receive a paper ticket from their initial airline if a flight has been canceled and they want to try to switch to another carrier. In addition, airline employees must fill out a handwritten "flight interruption manifest" for each ticketholder who's looking to rebook elsewhere. But with an industry-standard setup based on XML, Young said, a passenger's electronic ticket could automatically be transferred to another airline's system. The common XML technology would provide an easy-to-process format for all the airlines and could make electronic tickets more valuable than paper ones, he added. "We want to create an environment where we're treating our electronic customers better than our paper-ticket customers, which is certainly the opposite of what it is today," Young said. Al Lenza, vice president of distribution planning at Minneapolis-based Northwest Airlines Inc., said 67% of his company's domestic flyers use electronic tickets -- making it imperative that the transferability problem be solved. At the conference, executives from Chicago-based United Air Lines Inc. and Fort Worth, Texas-based American Airlines Inc. also pledged their commitment to fixing the problem..."

[August 11, 2000] "OpenTravel Alliance Publishes Customer Profile Specifications and Submits them to ebXML." - "The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) published today its Version 1 specifications that gives the travel industry one universal format for collecting and exchanging customer preferences among airlines, hotels, car rental companies, tour operators, travel agencies, and related services. OTA has provided copies of the version to the ebXML meeting that is being held in San Jose, CA, this week. The OTA customer profile has innovative features to make life easier for travelers. The common format allows the travel industry and its web sites to collect information on identification and preferences only once and exchange it with suppliers of travel services as well as their intermediaries. The specification lets customers define collections of travel service in terms of their own varied needs, such as business travel or the annual church retreat. OTA Version 1 also contains comprehensive privacy features that enable the customer to control any transfer of personal data. The built-in controls allow only specified parts of the profile to be exchanged. The OTA specifications' use of Extensible Markup Language (XML) helps make e-business more accessible to a wider number of companies by defining common industry terms for Internet-based data exchange. The specifications include electronic XML validation rules, called document type definitions, as well as many sample OTA messages. The drafts of these that were issued in February 2000 generated comments from all over the world, from both inside and outside the travel industry. The final specifications released today incorporate these, which have significantly strengthened Version 1. They can be freely downloaded from www.opentravel.org . OTA participates in the Electronic Business XML (ebXML) initiative to develop a single XML message infrastructure to facilitate communication between different businesses and industries in different countries. ebXML used OTA's draft sample messages as part of its proof of concept tests at its May meeting in Brussels, Belgium. As a further contribution to ebXML, OTA is providing its Version 1 specifications. OTA is keen to align its specifications with those in other industries, including the work of the CPExchange initiative, and sees ebXML as an effective way of doing this. With over 150 members representing influential names in all sectors of the travel industry, including air, car, hotel, travel agencies, technology providers and other travel related suppliers, the Alliance is comprised of five work groups air, car, hotel, leisure supplier, and non-supplier. These groups, together with an interoperability committee to coordinate their efforts, are developing open Internet-compatible messages using XML data terms." [ cache ]

[May 12, 2000] "ebXML Uses OpenTravel Alliance Specification for Early Tests." - "In its first plenary session, the electronic business XML or ebXML initiative announced two of its project teams will test early deliverables with content based on the OpenTravel Alliance specification. The ebXML initiative is developing the first common global e-business message structure and syntax based on the Extensible Markup Language or XML, and is holding its second working meeting this week in Brussels. An ebXML project team focusing on transport, routing, and packaging will develop a prototype using sample messages based on version 1 of the OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) specification. This specification, released for public comment in February 2000, provides a common customer profile for travel suppliers, intermediaries, and customers. The sample ebXML messages will test early versions of the initiative's message structure, as well as common addressing and security data. The test messages will generate and update sample customer profiles created by a travel agency and stored by an airline and car rental company. Another ebXML project team focusing on core components will test concepts for a system to generate sample data items common across business domains. This group will test items from the travel, tourism, and leisure industries using the OTA specification as a source. This ebXML team will test items from manufacturing and the international supply chain as well. The ebXML mission is to provide an open XML-based infrastructure enabling the global use of electronic business information in an interoperable, secure and consistent manner by all parties. Five individuals from OTA member companies are taking part in the May 2000 ebXML meetings, representing both their respective organizations and the Alliance. In addition, the Data Interchange Standards Association , that provides technical and administrative management for OTA, has two staff members participating in the current meetings. OTA, which began in May 1999, has over 120 members representing influential names in all sectors of the travel industry, including air, car rental, hotel, travel agencies, technology providers and related suppliers. The Alliance is comprised of five working groups air, car, hotel, leisure supplier, and non-supplier together, with an interoperability committee to coordinate their efforts. OTA defined its open messages with XML, the new high-powered language that makes it possible to exchange business data seamlessly among different systems, companies, and industries over the World Wide Web. The OTA will hold its annual OTA Advisory Forum on May 17, 2000 in Tempe, AZ."

[March 15, 2000] "DISA Propels New OpenTravel Alliance Customer Profile Specification." - "The new OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) customer profile message specification, developed in under 10 months, got a big boost from the support by the Data Interchange Standards Association (DISA) . Beginning in September 1999, DISA provided technical and management assistance that culminated in OTA's version 1 released for public comment on Feb. 29. 'DISA offered much of the technical expertise to bring together the contributions of professionals from airlines, hotels, travel agencies, car rental companies, leisure travel vendors, and technology support services,' said OTA Board Chairman Jim Young of Continental Airlines. Providing an executive director, standards manager, and membership manager, DISA took the ideas of over 100 corporate members and crafted them into a specifications document now available for review on the OTA web site at www.opentravel.org. The OTA web site also offers a live demonstration of the customer profile that uses validated messages based on Extensible Markup Language (XML), the new high-powered web language designed for e-business. OTA , which only began in May 1999, now has over 100 members representing influential names in all sectors of the travel industry, including air, car rental, hotel, travel agencies, technology providers and related suppliers. The Alliance is comprised of five working groups air, car, hotel, leisure supplier, and non-supplier together with an interoperability committee to coordinate their efforts. OTA defined its open messages with XML that makes it possible to exchange business data seamlessly among different systems, companies, and industries over the World Wide Web. Promoting e-commerce in a global marketplace, DISA provides technical and management services to standards and XML specification development organizations, including the Accredited Standards Committee (ASC) X12, OTA, the Interactive Financial Exchange Forum, the Mortgage Industry Standards Maintenance Organization, and the XML/EDI Group."

[June 23, 2000] "Newmarket Assembles Forum to Accelerate E-Commerce Standards in Hospitality Industry. With standard formats being developed for Internet-based data exchange, top technology professionals assess what the hospitality industry must do to drive B2B e-commerce across a global economy." - "Using HITEC 2000 as an industry platform, Newmarket International, Inc. gathered an interconnected community of hospitality professionals, including representatives from the American Hotel & Motel Association (AH&MA), the Hospitality Industry Technology Integration Standards (HITIS) Advisory Committee, the OpenTravel Alliance (OTA), Microsoft Corp., and major hospitality corporations such as Wyndham International, Inc. to accelerate momentum in e-commerce standardization. The forum communicated to attending media and industry leaders how the major players will cooperate to adopt and drive open standards to create the most efficient business practices. With specifications from both OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) and AH&MA's Hospitality Industry Technology Integration Standards (HITIS), Advisory Committee an Internet commerce trade exchange will span suppliers and markets throughout the hospitality industry. 'Now that HITIS has completed the extension of our Phase I standards to XML, we are eager to see the industry implement standard content and messaging industry-wide,' said Bob Elliott of the HITIS Advisory Committee. 'With XML as the common denominator, each participant in this vast industry can adapt to the standard depending on where each fits in the market. I am pleased that HITIS and the OTA are now committed to working together to develop one common standard for reservation booking in the travel industry'. 'The standards are being set, the road has been opened; XML is the way,' said Steve Giblin. 'Our use of XML for lead exchange among our publishing partners and Newmarket customers has verified how quickly existing systems can interface and adapt to emerging solutions.' Newmarket created MeetingBroker.com , which now serves as a testimonial to the capabilities of XML and open standards, and which will enable Newmarket to contribute effectively to further developments in HITIS and OTA standards. AH&MA's HITIS has been at work for several years developing interchange formats to link hotels' front office, back office and central reservations systems to share information in a common format. Both OTA and HITIS have selected XML (eXtensible Markup Language) as the data transfer format which makes technology development and maintenance easiest." See XML-based Standards - 'The HITIS Initiative has completed the extension of Phase I Standards to eXtensible Markup Language (XML).'

[March 22, 2000] "HEDNA's Hotel Distribution Expertise Unites with OpenTravel Alliance Initiatives." - "In a overwhelming rally of support, the Hotel Electronic Distribution Network Association (HEDNA) joined forces with the OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) to provide a foundation for the hotel contribution to OTA's first draft specification that addresses the complex subject of customer profiles. OTA's version 1 utilized the Hotel Descriptive Content Specifications, created by the Distribution Action Committee of HEDNA. Representing HEDNA membership and maintaining an observer status on the OTA Board of Directors, HEDNA has joined the Alliance and will continue to influence the direction of distribution technology and standards for hotel companies. OTA's version 1, developed in under 10 months and released for 30-day public review Feb. 29, uses Extensible Markup Language (XML) the new high powered language designed for e-business. Representing the specifications for customer profiles, version 1 cuts across all sectors of the travel industry, including hotels, airlines, car rentals and other travel services. Developing version 1 required OTA to work with groups, such as HEDNA, to create a common vocabulary for the travel industry, taking advantage of the flexible nature of XML that allows for later growth if needed. OTA, which only began in May 1999, now has over 100 members representing influential names in all sectors of the travel industry, including air, car rental, hotel, travel agencies, technology providers and related suppliers. The Alliance is comprised of five working groups air, car, hotel, leisure supplier, and non-supplier together with an interoperability committee to coordinate their efforts. OTA defined its open messages with XML, which makes it possible to exchange business data seamlessly among different systems, companies, and industries over the World Wide Web." [ alternate URL ]

[March 29, 2000] "GetThere Application Network Ties Corporate Travel to Business-to-Business Framework. GetThere Teams With Industry Leaders to Link B2B Travel With Major Systems In Expense Reporting and B2B Commerce." - " GetThere.com, Inc. , a leading provider of Internet-based business-to-business travel procurement systems, today announced the GetThere Application Network. The Application Network includes a new XML standard interface to link B2B applications with GetThere's Internet travel procurement system. Also a part of the Application Network, GetThere is teaming with several industry leaders to establish open communication between their systems and the GetThere Exchange, including Ariba, Captura, Concur Technologies, Extensity, and Gelco. The GetThere Application Network provides corporations with a seamless path to integrate their GetThere online travel procurement system with applications such as human resources management, expense management and other B2B commerce systems, using a standards-based extensible mark-up language (XML) interface. As an example of an integrated solution, corporate users booking their travel online can automatically populate an expense report with the travel expense information. After adding other expenses from the trip, the traveler sends the electronic report for approvals and reimbursement. In a different scenario, corporations that have had success with employees adopting Internet travel procurement can begin adding procurement of other goods or services in the same familiar portal on the company's intranet. .. The new GetThere Application Network includes an interface that enables seamless integration between the GetThere's travel procurement system and other business applications. It uses XML as the standard language between GetThere and other systems, and adds special features, such as expense report pre-population, data streaming, enhanced reporting and authentication/security, as well as user profile synchronization. The Open Travel Alliance (OTA) XML-based interface is a core component of the GetThere Application Network. GetThere and many of its partners are members of the OTA, which seeks to create and promote industry standards for data exchange in the travel industry. GetThere is promoting development of the OTA standard across the industry, ensuring interoperability between travel procurement applications and other leading enterprise applications."

[February 29, 2000] "OpenTravel Alliance's New XML Specification Creates a Common Customer Profile for Travelers." - "Charged with crafting Internet specifications based on the Extensible Markup Language (XML), the OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) released today a draft of its first specification for public comment. OTA version 1 tackles the complex subject of customer profiles that cuts across travel industry sectors. This first specification demonstrates the ability of OTA's infrastructure and process to achieve this goal, and do it quickly. OTA developed the specification with a key objective of letting customers enter their basic data and travel preferences just once, no matter how many travel suppliers and intermediaries are involved in a trip. Achieving this goal required OTA to create a common vocabulary for the travel industry, taking advantage of the extensible nature of XML that still allows for more growth later if needed. A live demonstration of OTA version 1 messages shows that travel companies can begin using the specification right away. The demonstration, accessible from the OTA web site, www.opentravel.org, lets visitors create, read, update and delete simple customer profiles with valid XML messages. McCord Travel and Airline Automation Inc. developed the demonstration on behalf of OTA. OTA, which only began in May 1999, now has over 100 members representing influential names in all sectors of the travel industry, including air, car rental, hotel, travel agencies, technology providers and related suppliers. The Alliance is comprised of five working groups -- air, car, hotel, leisure supplier, and non-supplier -- together, with an interoperability committee to coordinate their efforts. OTA defined its open messages with XML, the new high-powered language that makes it possible to exchange business data seamlessly among different systems, companies, and industries over the World Wide Web."

[February 23, 2000] "Extensity Joins OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) to Help Make the Online Travel Market More Efficient and Dynamic. Participation Builds on Extensity's Mission to Help Customers Seamlessly Access Business Content, Commerce and Services to Improve The Way They Do Business." - " Extensity Inc. , a provider of Internet-based workforce optimization solutions, today announced that it has joined the OpenTravel Alliance (OTA). The OTA is a group of senior executives from various facets of the travel industry, including lodging, airline carriers, credit card issuers, and online booking and computer reservation system companies, who are helping drive technology standards that will make the electronic exchange of travel related information easier. Extensity's participation builds on Extensity's mission for delivering technology that enables seamless access to business content, commerce and services through its suite of Internet-based applications to improve productivity of employees across the enterprise. By ensuring the free flow of travel information over the Internet, the OTA's goal is to help customers be more efficient in researching and booking travel online. With standards built on XML specifications, customers will be able to easily mix and match trip-related information from multiple sites rather than stepping through disconnected sites and processes for online travel."

[February 04, 2000] "Data Interchange Standards Association Becomes New Host Of XML/EDI Group." - "The XML/EDI Group, the largest grass-roots organization advocating the Extensible Markup Language (XML) for business exchanges over the Internet, has joined with the Data Interchange Standards Association (DISA) for management of its business and technical services. The XML/EDI Group and DISA made the announcement today at the Electronic Business XML (ebXML) meeting in Orlando, Fla. The XML/EDI Group becomes the latest client of DISA's rapidly growing Collaborative Services Division. Like other Collaborative Services clients, DISA will host the XML/EDI Group's web site and e-mail discussion list, as well as provide a venue for regular meetings of the group. DISA will also provide the XML/EDI Group with publishing and administrative services. The XML/EDI Group began in July 1997 as an ad hoc collection of a few professionals and volunteers in various industries dedicated to promoting and guiding the future of XML standards and products applied to electronic data interchange (EDI). The Group has grown to about 1,700 members focusing on the technology of incorporating XML with e-business particularly for smaller enterprises that have not before been able to use EDI. The XML/EDI Group has a popular e-mail discussion list that generates a continuous flow of serious yet lively exchanges on XML technology for e-business. The Group has written guidelines for XML's use with EDI and proposed specifications for repositories of XML/EDI specifications used by industry groups. The Group's activities have encouraged development of e-business standards in both North America and Europe where the group has active chapters. DISA, a Virginia-based not-for-profit association, is the leading provider of educational and networking forums on e-business. Promoting e-commerce in a global marketplace, DISA provides technical and management services to standards and XML specification development organizations, including the OpenTravel Alliance..." See "ANSI ASC X12/XML and DISA."

"OpenTravel Alliance Joins Forces with DISA."

OpenTravel FAQ document

"ANSI ASC X12/XML and DISA."

DISA ASC X12

Document URI: http://xml.coverpages.org/openTravel.html   —   Legal stuff Robin Cover, Editor: [email protected]

OpenAPI Initiative

OpenTravel Alliance

A good travel experience begins with one single booking portal – how open apis are leading the way.

ota open travel alliance

For more information on the OpenAPI Initiative and #sig-travel, join the conversation on Slack. https://open-api.slack.com/archives/C0122NPKUR2

Today’s traveler is increasingly shopping for an experience, not just a seat on a plane or bed in a hotel. In fact, the travel experience begins from the booking environment itself where consumers expect a single portal to connect across travel providers and travel retailers. People are looking for the convenience and value of the delivery and ride sharing apps that they use in their day-to-day lives and want that applied to the travel experience.

The reason the travel industry has lagged behind modern expectations is because it has lagged behind the latest technological trends. It’s that simple.

Creating an End-to-End Journey is Hard

The process and protocols largely used today between providers have their base in travel standards agreed to in the 1960s and modified over time. Initially created to address airline interlining, allowing a single ticket to include flights on multiple air carriers, they have been pressed into service across the travel verticals.

As time has gone on the once workable solution has begun to show its limitations. There are multiple efforts in the industry to break with the past and pursue an approach where a travel offer may be handled much like any other retail offering in the digital space.

Travel, however, has some unique needs as products are transient (an empty seat is worthless after departure time) and in most cases specific to location (airplanes must land at an airport). Also, in most cases a travel product must be combined with another travel product to satisfy a request to create a trip.

Creating an end-to-end journey implies a combined offer from multiple offers proposed and/or serviced by multiple providers. This adds a level of complexity, maintaining relationships between offers, other retail categories avoid.

Key Takeaway: Focusing on the experience as a new approach to travel retail requires a new level of interoperability among participants in the travel market.

Addressing Interoperability Will Open Up Broad Opportunities

Solving the issues to support experience based, total trip, retail at scale could unlock massive economic opportunities for many of the current distribution channels operating today or create new ones. Mainstream distribution channels focus mainly on air which in the US had a total operating revenue of $120 [1] billion. However, the total US travel revenue for 2019 was $1.1 [2] trillion.

Much of that figure is consumers figuring out for themselves how to make arrangements, a huge, missed opportunity to leverage automation. To build the experiences people are looking for, outside of immediate travel and lodging portals like Expedia, consumers are bouncing between websites and calendars to find restaurants, museum passes and jet ski rentals.

The reason we aren’t seeing a wider variety of offerings is not hard to understand: For the mainline distributors it’s not worth the effort to connect, maintain and monitor small suppliers thru bespoke APIs.

By unlocking interoperability, providers of travel products and services would have access to channels they are currently shut out of due to costs and complexity. The public is eager to get out of the house and experience the world again but would like to avoid the odious task of DIY travel orchestration and management. They want experience led retailing which industries like hospitality are investing in but only at the property level, not at the full trip level.

The travel industry cannot afford to allow API chaos to continue to be a barrier to more effective retailing.

Getting Alignment on the Solution is Critical

In response, the OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) and the OpenAPI Initiative (OAI) will work together to focus on API conventions and standards, not just messages. Within OAI, there is now a special interest group to focus on travel issues (#sig-travel).

The Travel SIG will be the conduit for the needs of the travel industry that pertain to the Open API Specification (OAS). The OAS is a broad specification intended to help developers solve real world business issues with as much flexibility as possible.

What is needed for interoperability and to reduce API chaos and hence distribution costs in travel is more consistency in API behaviors. OpenTravel will take the lead on providing open-source tooling and publishing reference architectures with refence implementations that adhere to the OAS. OTA 2.0 with its model driven approach will form the basis of this more comprehensive approach that supports all travel verticals. This will be in cooperation with existing travel standards bodies and trade associations.

The overriding goal will be to lower the cost of connectivity to publish, acquire, distribute, and market digital travel products.

What Can I do?

Join the conversation and help build a more modern and seamless travel industry! For more information on the OpenAPI Initiative and #sig-travel, join the conversation on Slack. https://open-api.slack.com/archives/C0122NPKUR2

For more information on OTA 2.0, including becoming an Open Travel member, go to www.opentravel.org or contact Jeff ErnstFriedman at [email protected] .

[1] Source: Phocuswright White Paper, Air Sales and the Travel Agency Distribution Channel April 2019

[2] Source: U.S. TRAVEL AND TOURISM OVERVIEW (2019), US Travel Association.

OpenAPI Welcomes the OpenTravel Alliance as New Member

ota open travel alliance

OpenAPI welcomes the OpenTravel Alliance as its newest member!

OpenTravel is a not-for-profit trade association that develops data messaging structures in order to facilitate communication between the many facets of the travel industry. It is the travel industry’s only open-source, interoperability data standard. Using OpenTravel messaging, travelers can search, book, pay and check-in/out in a completely contactless environment.

“We see solid strategic alignment between the mission of OpenTravel Alliance and that of the OpenAPI Initiative,” said Jeff ErnstFriedman, Executive Director at OpenTravel Alliance. “We share a goal of promoting open standards in the API economy and OAI is the nexus for all aspects of generating an API marketplace. We are looking forward to bringing the voice of the travel industry to the 2020 API Specifications Conference being held Sept 9 – 10.”

Tens of thousands of OpenTravel messaging structures are currently in use. The open source standard encompass air, rail, cruise, golf, tour packages, ground transportation, hotel and car rentals. The organization got its start using an XML messaging system, but has since made OpenTravel Messaging available in JSON, WSDL and OpenAPI Spec. 

To help the travel industry adapt to COVID-19, OpenTravel has rolled out a new COVID protocol messaging system. In the upcoming release OpenTravel messaging will include capabilities that allow travel companies to take advantage of the pent-up demand and increase revenue.

“Our technology allows for interoperability between suppliers that will increase revenue opportunities and decrease technology costs,” ErnstFriedman said. “The interoperability component of OpenTravel Messaging will allow for a seamless traveler experience that will reduce physical touchpoints and expedite the movement of travelers throughout their journey.” 

“OpenTravel Alliance is an exciting addition to the OpenAPI Initiative,” said Marsh Gardiner, Product Manager, Google Cloud, and Technical Steering Committee member, OpenAPI Initiative. “Standardizing how APIs are described to streamline development makes good sense for many different industries, and travel in particular can benefit.” 

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About the OpenAPI Initiative

The OpenAPI Initiative (OAI) was created by a consortium of forward-looking industry experts who recognize the immense value of standardizing on how APIs are described. As an open governance structure under the Linux Foundation, the OAI is focused on creating, evolving and promoting a vendor neutral description format. The OpenAPI Specification was originally based on the Swagger Specification, donated by SmartBear Software. To get involved with the OpenAPI Initiative, please visit https://www.openapis.org

About Linux Foundation 

Founded in 2000, the Linux Foundation is supported by more than 1,000 members and is the world’s leading home for collaboration on open source software, open standards, open data, and open hardware. Linux Foundation projects like Linux, Kubernetes, Node.js and more are considered critical to the development of the world’s most important infrastructure. Its development methodology leverages established best practices and addresses the needs of contributors, users and solution providers to create sustainable models for open collaboration. For more information, please visit us at linuxfoundation.org.

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  3. OpenTravel Alliance Finalizes Annual Meeting Agenda

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  1. OpenTravel

    About OpenTravel. The OpenTravel Alliance provides a community where companies in the electronic distribution supply chain work together to create an accepted structure for electronic messages, enabling suppliers and distributors to speak the same interoperability language, trading partner to trading partner. Learn More.

  2. OpenTravel Alliance

    History. OpenTravel was founded in 1999 by a consortium of travel companies - including air, hotel, car rental, and supporting software companies - with a primary focus on the creation of electronic message structures to facilitate communication between the disparate systems in the global travel industry. The OpenTravel Alliance presented their ...

  3. Download the OpenTravel Specification

    1. Documentation. OpenTravel provides the Specifications for voluntary use by individuals, partnerships, companies, corporations, organizations, and other entities at their own risk.; The Specifications and any OpenTravel supplied supporting information, data, or software in whatever medium in connection with the Specifications are referred to ...

  4. OpenAPI

    OpenTravel Message Adopters & Integrators. About 2.0 Object Model. Help with common technical issues. OTM Repository Access. OTM Tool. OpenAPI. OpenAPI Initiative cooperation. Arazzo. Participate in the OpenAPI Travel Special Interest Group (sig-travel)

  5. OpenTravel Alliance

    Applications and utilities for model developers to use in conjunction with the OTM-DE. OpenTravel web site application for the publication and comment submission of OTA technical specifications. Maintenance Release ONLY, please use DEX from utilities. OpenTravel Development Environment - Model Designer. Design information models in a standalone ...

  6. Open Travel Alliance (OTA)

    The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) develops open e-business specifications for the travel industry. The objective of these specifications is to form a common e-business language to support and encourage development of systems related to travelers and the travel industry.

  7. Open Travel Alliance

    Tim Cochran (Executive Director) (703) 518-4163. OpenTravel Alliance. The booming travel industry is changing rapidly as customer requirements diversify. With the proliferation of the Internet and ...

  8. OTA plan lets agents craft Net language

    CHICAGO -- The Open Travel Alliance (OTA) took a step in the right direction with structural changes that will allow agents to participate more fully in the alliance's development of a common ...

  9. The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA)

    The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) The OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) is a self-funded, non-profit organization comprised of major airlines, hoteliers, car rental companies, leisure suppliers, travel agencies, global distribution systems, technology providers, and other interested parties working to create and implement industry-wide, open e-business ...

  10. Code List

    Download Here. Download here - 965 KB zip Description As of June, 2014, the Code List contained 150 tables with a combined 5,598 code table items in an MS-Excel spreadsheet that is included in the XML product zip file and available as a separate download on this page for OpenTravel members and the public. Announcements In January, 2015 ...

  11. Cover Pages: OpenTravel Alliance (OTA)

    The Open Travel Alliance (OTA) XML-based interface is a core component of the GetThere Application Network. GetThere and many of its partners are members of the OTA, which seeks to create and promote industry standards for data exchange in the travel industry. GetThere is promoting development of the OTA standard across the industry, ensuring ...

  12. Frequently Asked Questions about OpenTravel

    Membership is open to all travel suppliers, non-supplier companies, and incorporated industry associations that provide products and services to the travel industry. Membership dues are based on a sliding scale allowing participation from company's of all sizes the opportunity to benefit from membership in the OpenTravel Alliance.

  13. OTA holds membership drive

    The Open Travel Alliance launched a membership drive, inviting travel companies and associations to join. OTA is working to enhance the exchange of travel industry information over the Internet ...

  14. Observing OTA

    Certainly, if OTA's new digital design works as designed and enables suppliers to tag-team the likes of a traveler's credit card info, frequent flyer data, and hotel and rental-car preferences ...

  15. Designing ontology for the open travel alliance airline messaging

    The open travel alliance (OTA) messaging system is among popular and widely used ontologies. In [9], the researchers aimed to use OTA messages and generate a new ontology for air travels as well ...

  16. OpenTravel Alliance Releases OTA Specification Version 2003A for Travel

    OTA is a non-profit organization of more than 150 members from major airlines, hoteliers, car rental companies, leisure suppliers, travel agencies, global distribution systems (GDS), technology providers and other interested parties, working to create and implement industry-wide, open e-business specifications."

  17. OpenTravel Alliance Archives

    In response, the OpenTravel Alliance (OTA) and the OpenAPI Initiative (OAI) will work together to focus on API conventions and standards, not just messages. Within OAI, there is now a special interest group to focus on travel issues (#sig-travel). ... It is the travel industry's only open-source, interoperability data standard. Using ...

  18. OpenTravel Codelists

    Click to download a copy of the most recent OpenTravel Codelists. Updated on April 6, 2020. View older Codelists. Updated on March 17, 2020. Updated on April 29, 2019. Updated on February 24, 2016. If there something that you would like to add, please follow our process on this page here. Thank you for your support of the OpenTravel Alliance.

  19. Possible introduction of electronic visas in Krasnodar Krai

    According to the Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergey Lavrov, the possibility of introducing electronic visas for foreign visitors of Krasnodar Krai, similar to those existing in the Kaliningrad region and on the territory of the Free Port of Vladivostok, is being considered now.

  20. traveling to Krasnodar

    I will be traveling to Krasnodar sometime during the spring of 2010 but I have a couple of questions. I will be traveling from the US and want to know if I will have to travel via Moscow or if there is a more direct route either from Ukraine...

  21. Krasnodar Map

    Krasnodar. Krasnodar is the capital of Krasnodar Krai in southern Russia, with a popolulation in 2018 of just under 900,000. Its main industries are based on agriculture and food. Ukraine is facing shortages in its brave fight to survive. Please support Ukraine, as Ukraine stands as a defender of a peaceful, free and democratic world.

  22. OpenTravel Publishes Updated Codelists (2020-03-17)

    The OpenTravel Alliance has updated its publicly available Codelists in support of the OpenTravel 1.0 Messaging. The latest version of the Codelist is available for download on the OpenTravel site: here. OpenTravel Alliance maintains the code list for the OpenTravel Specification for adoption by the entire travel community.

  23. Safety for foreigners in Krasnodar

    I am planning to visit Krasnodar in September and then travel onto Simferopol, is safe to visit these two places? Report inappropriate content . 1-5 of 5 replies Sorted by. 1. MuscoviteVT. Moscow, Russia. 6,402 posts. 636 helpful votes. 1. Re: Safety for foreigners in Krasnodar .