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Press Release

Issued by .

September 25, 2007

Air Routing International introduces enhancements to Flight Manager™ Program

Air Routing International ("ARI") (NBAA booth No.1705), a worldwide leader in corporate flight handling to the business aviation industry, is introducing three enhancements to Flight Manager, the web application that flight departments can use to obtain current flight details on their planned trip as well as display the locations of aircraft and routes of planned flights.

First is a new Flight Manager front page that enables users to link directly to other information services; also an in-house Card Program ™ that enables clients to view their invoice statements online through Flight Manager; as well as the ability for clients to directly determine and configure the number of users who have access to Flight Manager and the ability for them to edit information changes online directly.

"Since Flight Manager was first introduced in 1998 it has become the premiere online aviation web application for corporate aviation," said John Legh-Page, chief information officer for Air Routing. "Since then we've continuously refined and improved this service, to ensure our customers have the most up-to-date tools available for their planned flights."

Flight Manager's new front page is part of an Air Routing upgrade to a Web 2.0 program that now enables users to link to ASI Group for their events and to its HotSpots, a daily intelligence briefing relevant to world events. It also features links for current alerts which include weather issues, airport outages, NOTAMs, and fuel outages. Users will have immediate access to this information as well as news from Air Routing and even links, for example, to changes in a country's immigration policy. A link will be available to a daily weather video that Air Routing produces.

The in-house Card Program now enables clients to view their statements on a weekly basis on the Flight Manager website. Each client will be able to configure who will have access to the information. In the past, clients had Air Routing make changes to the number and names of Flight Manager users, to add a new account or disable an account, and edit account information. Clients will now have the ability to make those changes directly.

These new enhancements come on the heels of last year's unveiling of Global Trip View™, a Flight Manager feature that flight departments can use to display the locations of aircraft and routes of planned flights. Global Trip View provides a visual screen shot, appearing as the earth would look like in a NASA space photo, with a trip overlaid on the screen. It also offers zoom and pan navigational capabilities and an auto update feature allows flight departments to leave the display open on their PC and view flight updates as they occur.

Air Routing's Flight Manager (www.flightmanager.com) business aviation trip-planning program is the vehicle where other Air Routing products and services can be incorporated or accessed via desktop, laptop or PDA. Flight Manager keeps flight crews informed about details of the latest trip changes. Pilots, dispatchers, and schedulers can check the status of permits, fuel and ground-service arrangements, flight plans, hotel and ground transportation, security and weather through wireless on most handheld PDA devices.

Flight Manager provides an extensive amount of airport information for each user to access. In addition to terminal forecast, current observation, NOTAMs, wind speed and a current satellite image, ARI has recently added a seven day passenger forecast for locations worldwide to its Flight Manager suite of products.

Flight Manager users now have the capability to rate a location which is then stored and available for other users to access. This helps everyone involved to have a better understanding of what to expect when traveling to a new location. The rating is also sent to the appropriate feedback representative who follows up with the provider in question to allow ARI to provide superior and consistent service.

ARI understands that the trip is not finished until all invoices have been reconciled. To help facilitate their clients' needs several advancements have been made to the invoice section within Flight Manager. All invoices, attached to a specific trip, are separated by service provider, invoice date, location and include quick reference tools to simplify the accounting process.

"Clients who subscribe to ARI's Domestic Flight Watch™ Program ("DFW") can use Flight Manager to automatically send their new flight schedules to Air Routing Operations for submission to the Federal Aviation Administration's ATC system and the NBAA GA Desk," Legh-Page said. "There is an automatic interface built between Flight Manager and Air Routing operations that allow ARI clients to upload their schedules daily for all upcoming flights. The Domestic Flight Watch program enables clients to be informed in advance about potential delays and helps them make effective operational decisions."

ARI clients using Flight Manager are able to get their fuel quotes through Air Routing Fuel's ™ website (www.airroutingfuel.com) and make their fuel arrangements online for each leg of their trip. Flight Manager features a built-in fuel cost calculator that measures fuel burn and how much fuel will be used on the trip as well as into plane costs for replacing that fuel.

ARI's Flight Manager has been designed to make it easy for passengers and flight crew to get the most recent aviation weather forecasts since Flight Manager interfaces with ARI's online weather resource AiRMET®. Flight Manager users can click on any airport and obtain immediate weather conditions as well as seven day passenger weather forecasts.