San Diego Airport Examiner Joel Siegfried recently wrote and article describing the best way to keep track of your frequent flyer miles.
An innovative, secure, free web service lets travelers track their frequent flyer miles. It also does much more.
Why keep track of your miles? Because they may expire without you knowing. You wouldn’t throw away and airline ticket which is exactly what you are doing if you let your reward points and miles expire. Read Joel’s article in its entirety here…

Track Reward Points and Miles, for FREE!
Posted 8 months, 3 weeks ago at 3:18 pm. Add a comment
Book your next flight at united.com with your Visa card to be entered to win a trip for two to the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympic Games. You must purchase your ticket before November 15, 2009 and complete your travel by December 1, 2009.
United Airlines – United Airlines – Special offer for Visa cardholders, Vancouver Winter Olympics promotion, Domestic and international airline tickets, all-inclusive vacation packages and travel deals..
Posted 8 months, 3 weeks ago at 7:52 am. Add a comment

Between October 28, 2009 and December 31, 2009 you can consolidate your points from other programs to Continental OnePass miles. You can also get a 20% bonus when you trade these points plus 100 bonus reward points when you register on Points.com.
Details here…
Posted 8 months, 4 weeks ago at 2:13 pm. Add a comment
On average we belong to 6 reward programs. This can be everything from credit card reward programs, airline frequent flyer programs, hotel, the list goes on. Keeping track of these can be a real pain. Scott Wilson from the LA Times recently reviewed a handful of tools that can help user track their reward points and miles.
I recently tried out six online services that offer to track your frequent-flier miles for you. I wanted one that would show all my family’s miles, plus the expiration dates (it’s no use accumulating miles only to see them suddenly disappear). Ideally, all the information should be on one page. And if I could get it all free, all the better.
Read the full article at the LA Times web site.
Posted 8 months, 4 weeks ago at 1:20 pm. Add a comment