Six Characters

(ajitem.com)

56 points | by Airplanepasta 3 days ago

6 comments

  • Procrastes 1 minute ago
    A half-joking comment I once heard from someone who was part of the group that established the NUC. It stood for "Not US Currency," but tracks the dollar because that compromise was the only thing everyone could agree on. The first stablecoin.
  • croisillon 20 minutes ago
    Related: 49 comments, 5 days ago https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47730712
  • chrismorgan 2 hours ago
    Also not mentioned, they’re not unique across time: six base-36 characters is only 2 billion possibilities, wouldn’t surprise me if the largest GDS would blow through the entire space within a year. <https://support.travelport.com/webhelp/smartpointcloud/Conte...> suggests they get purged after a week, and recycled.

    I wonder what fraction of the space is occupied at any given time.

    • Procrastes 4 minutes ago
      There used to be a story going around, possibly apocryphal, that the process to reset them used to be entirely manual and generally unknown to the rest of the organization. There was a big problem the week the person who had that task retired. Someone around here was probably there if it really happened and can add some color.
  • Mordisquitos 1 hour ago
    After reading the article, for some reason I am finding the following fact profoundly distressing. Surely there are more than 1000 active airlines worldwide‽

    > Every airline has a 3-digit IATA numeric code. 098 = Air India. British Airways is 125. IndiGo is 526. These codes predate the familiar 2-letter IATA codes (AI, BA, 6E): they were used when teletypes could not reliably transmit letters and numbers interchangeably.

    • lexicality 1 hour ago
      The IATA has 367 active airlines.

      Bear in mind that this doesn't apply to charter airlines, only public passenger ones.

      Given there are about 200 countries in the world, you'd need 5 large airlines per country, which is a lot! Most of them don't have any and rely on other countries. Still more have a single national carrier.

    • addaon 1 hour ago
      Also, not every airline has a 3-digit code. e.g. Aero Republica has the two-alphanum designator P5, but doesn't have a 3-digit.
    • ks2048 1 hour ago
      IATA-registered airlines - it seems there are 370,

      https://www.iata.org/en/about/members/airline-list/

  • hamburglar 2 hours ago
    Interesting post. One detail I don’t see is how the ROE info actually tells you what currency to convert to. I see the exchange rate calculation but how do you know what the final units are?
  • echoangle 2 hours ago
    [dead]