Kyronis Profile picture
May 16 12 tweets 4 min read Read on X
THAT’S WHY AIRLINES HATE CLAUDE.

Flight showing $889.
I paid $229.

No points. No VPN. No “secret” travel guru.

Claude turned my laptop into a flight‑hunting machine.

Here are 10 prompts that find cheaper tickets, safer policies, and better routes in minutes (Save this). Image
1) Best dates around your trip

Prompt:
“Act as a travel pricing analyst.

I want to fly from [origin] to [destination] around [target date].

Look at a window of [X days] before and after that date.
Find the 3 cheapest departure/return combinations.

For each option, explain:
• Exact dates
• Total price
• Why it’s cheaper (day of week, demand, events, etc.).”
2) Find flights normal searches miss

Prompt:
“Act as a flight search assistant.

List all available flights from [origin] to [destination] for the next [X weeks].

Include:
• Major airlines
• Low‑cost carriers
• Regional airlines
• Lesser‑known connections

Sort everything by total price (fare + mandatory fees), not just base fare.

Highlight any patterns where certain days or times are consistently cheaper.”
3) Smarter routes with good layovers

Prompt:
“Act as a routing expert.

Find alternative routes from [origin] to [destination] with 1–2 layovers that cost less than [budget in $].

Prioritize:
• Layovers shorter than [X hours]
• Airports with low transit hassle/fees
• Reasonable total travel time

Return:
• 3–5 route options (airports + airlines)
• Total price and travel time
• Why each route is a good tradeoff.”
4) Real deals, not fake promotions

Prompt:
“Act as my deal verifier.

For flights on [airlines or routes], find:
• Current promo codes
• Flash sales
• Public discounts

For each, tell me:
• Where it comes from (newsletter, site, campaign)
• Expiration date
• Conditions or restrictions
• How to apply it

Only include deals that are clearly valid and verifiable.
Ignore expired or suspicious offers.”
5) Break down all extra fees

Prompt:
“Act as a fare rules expert.

For this flight: [paste fare info or link]

Break down every extra cost:
• Baggage
• Seat selection
• Priority boarding
• Payment or service fees

Then:
• Show the real total price
• Suggest legal ways to avoid or reduce each fee (based on current fare rules)
• Warn me about any tricks that look cheap but cost more later.”
6) Write a price‑match / discount email

Prompt:
“Act as a polite but firm customer support negotiator.

I found this flight at [price] with [airline/agency], and a similar option at [higher price] with [airline/agency].

Draft a professional email asking for:
• A price match, OR
• A goodwill discount, OR
• Credits/benefits

Mention:
• My loyalty or history with them (I’ll fill in details)
• The competitor’s price
• Their current policies if relevant

Keep the tone respectful but confident.”
7) Compare risk if my plans change

Prompt:
“Act as a risk analyst for flight tickets.

Here are [2–4] flight options with their change/cancellation/refund rules: [paste or describe].

Compare them and tell me:
• Which option has the lowest financial risk if my plans change
• How much I’d lose in each scenario (change, cancel, no‑show)
• Any hidden clauses I should pay attention to

End with a simple recommendation: ‘If you value flexibility more than price, choose X; if you want the cheapest option and accept the risk, choose Y.’”
8) Evaluate hidden‑city ticket tricks

Prompt:
“Act as an aviation policy expert.

Explain whether using tickets with hidden destinations (hidden‑city ticketing) could reduce the cost from [origin] to [destination].

For my case:
• Show if it actually saves money
• List the real risks and airline policies
• In what specific situations it might be worth it
• When I should absolutely avoid it

I want a realistic risk/benefit analysis, not hype.”
9) Plan a full multi‑city trip

Prompt:
“Act as a travel planner.

I want to visit these places on one trip:
[list cities or countries]

My starting city: [origin]
Trip length: [X days/weeks]

Design the smartest route and flights.

Return:
• Best order to visit each city
• Suggested dates for each leg
• Recommended airports
• Approximate prices for each segment
• Where I save the most money by changing order or dates.”
10) Check the real trip cost, not just the ticket

Prompt:
“Act as a trip cost analyst.

I’m considering this flight: [details or link].

Estimate the *total* travel cost for this option, including:
• Flight price + fees
• Airport transfers (both sides)
• Likely baggage costs
• Common local transport costs for the times I arrive

Then:
• Suggest 1–2 alternative flight options (different times or airports)
• Compare total trip cost, not just the ticket
• Tell me which option gives the best value for money.”
You don’t beat airline pricing by refreshing the same search 20 times.

You beat it by:
• moving dates
• changing routes
• understanding fees
• measuring risk

Claude can do all of that thinking for you in one chat.

Use these 8 prompts before you book your next flight—
the difference between $889 and $229 adds up fast.

RT + Save this so you don’t forget them on your next trip.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Kyronis

Kyronis Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @kyronis_talks

May 6
A MIT PhD student told me he can predict exam questions before seeing the study guide.

Using NotebookLM.

I thought he was exaggerating.

Then he showed me the workflow.

He doesn’t wait for revision week.

He uploads past papers, lecture slides, textbook chapters, and old assignments into NotebookLM weeks in advance.

Then he runs 5 prompts.

By the time most students start studying, he already knows what the exam will probably look like.

Here’s the exact system:Image
1. The Pattern Hunter

Most students study topics.

Top students study patterns.

Paste this first:

“Analyze all past papers and course materials. What patterns exist in how this subject is examined? Identify recurring concepts, repeated question structures, favorite professor themes, and common traps.”

This changes everything.

Because exams rarely test randomly.

They test habits.
2. The Missing Topic Predictor

Professors don’t repeat the same paper.

But they often rotate neglected themes back in.

Paste:

“What important topics have not been tested recently but logically should be tested next based on course weight, chapter importance, and historical rotation?”

This is where predictions come from.

Not magic.

Pattern gaps.
Read 7 tweets
May 4
🚨BREAKING: Anthropic quietly shipped the feature that makes ChatGPT look like a chatbot.

Claude can now see your screen, click buttons, and send messages for you.

No plugins. No extensions. No setup hell.

Here're 11 powerful Claude features you'll wish you knew sooner: Image
1. You can now make, open, and change files and folders on your computer.
2. Choose how Claude responds.

Pick one of the new preset options: short, clear, or formal.
Read 12 tweets
May 3
Apple has just published a paper with a devastating title: *The Illusion of Thinking*. And it's not a metaphor. What it demonstrates is that the AI models we use every day - yes, ones like ChatGPT - don't think. Not one bit. They just imitate doing so.

Let me explain: 🧵👇 Image
The paper argues that those models, no matter how brilliant they may seem, do not understand what they are doing. They do not solve problems. They do not reason. They merely generate text word by word, trying to sound coherent. Real thought: zero.
To demonstrate this, Apple designed a series of experiments with logic puzzles: Tower of Hanoi, the river-crossing problem, stacked blocks, etc.

The same ones we use to see if a human or even a child can reason in steps.
Read 16 tweets
Apr 28
What iPhones shouldn't you buy now?
[Latest version 2026]

From best to worst ...

D (Still acceptable)
• iPhone 14
• iPhone 14 Plus
• iPhone 13
• iPhone 13 Pro / Pro Max

C (Average)
• iPhone 11
• iPhone 11 Pro / Pro Max
• iPhone XR
• iPhone XS

B (Trap) ↓↓
B (Trampa)
• iPhone 12
• iPhone 12 mini
• iPhone 12 Pro / Pro Max
• iPhone 13 mini
→ Weak battery, size that will likely lead to regret
A (Dangerous)
• iPhone SE (2nd generation)
• iPhone SE (3rd generation)
→ "The low price is the biggest mistake" (poor battery, size, and durability)
Read 7 tweets
Apr 25
🚨 SHOCKING TRUTH:

Most people are quietly building their own disaster — and they call it “planning for success.”

They set ambitious goals, feel motivated for a week, then slowly get destroyed by problems they never saw coming.

Charlie Munger had the ultimate weapon against this: Inversion.

But 99% of people use it like a weak journaling trick.

The real pros turn it into a ruthless failure-mapping machine.

I forced Claude to become a cold-blooded Inversion Engine that exposes every hidden path to failure with terrifying clarity.

Here are the 5 prompts that actually work:Image
Munger said it best: "Tell me where I'm going to die, so I'll never go there."

Most people use inversion as a cute thought exercise.

They ask "what if this fails?" write 3 bullet points, feel smart, and move on.

That's not inversion. That's journaling with extra steps.

Real inversion is forensic. You don't brainstorm failure. You systematically reconstruct it every assumption, every decision point, every handoff where things rot quietly before they collapse loudly.

The difference between someone who thinks about failure and someone who maps it is the difference between a smoke alarm and a fire investigation.

One warns you. The other tells you exactly what burned and why.
Prompt 1: The Pre-Mortem

"Assume it's 18 months from now and [your goal/project] has completely failed. Not stumbled failed. Dead. Done.

You're writing the post-mortem report.

Work backwards. Identify: the single decision that sealed it, the warning sign that appeared early but was ignored, the assumption that was never tested, and the person in the room who knew but didn't say it.

Be specific. Name the failure mode, not the feeling of failure.

Then rank the top 3 causes by how invisible they would have been at the start."
Read 9 tweets
Apr 24
I'VE BEEN USING CLAUDE FOR 2 YEARS.

Here are 6 prompts I use every morning that organize my day for me.

They can do the same for you, save it 🔖 Image
1. Daily Planning
Turn chaos into a clear plan.

"Act as a productivity coach. Organize my day with: goals, tasks, and deadlines. Give me the top 3 priorities and a structured schedule."
2. Learn any topic in minutes
For when you need to understand something quickly.

"Act as an expert in [topic]. Explain it to me with: simple concept, key principles, practical examples, and common mistakes."
Read 9 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(