God this website blows.<p>Just kidding. Hi, I'm Dan one of the cofounders of TicketStumbler.com. If you have any suggestions or feedback please leave them here no matter how minor.<p>If you have scathing criticism and are worried about being down modded, please email me directly - dan [at] ticketstumbler (dot) com.
Well, this is not something that applies to me, as I rarely buy tickets.<p>I do have one question: how do people get passionate about tickets? I mean, I LOVE the stuff I am working on, I NEED the stuff I am working on for myself, and I would not want to do anything else, but if they asked to me make a startup about tickets with a guaranteed 1 million payout, I'd really have a hard time doing it.<p>I just cannot imagine myself being passionate about <i>tickets</i>. It's a freakin ticket, I'm not going to devote a good chunk of my life towards making them a bit cheaper.
The site is nicely design, being a search hacker myself; I have to say this site pass the test of great relevancy search.<p>Your search model is as good as Intelliverb’s PageScale algorithm if not better, I think we should get in touch and share some tricks. : ) Nice Job guys!
I like the simple interface. I wish you could extend it to the actual buying phase though, so I don't need to go to StubHub and make an account there just to buy it, which (when I get a look at the overwrought stubhub site) might make me throw up my hands in frustration. Also, a couple tickets I clicked on had already been sold; it'd be great if you could prevent that... (btw, add concert ticket search and I will probably use this all the time.)
I resell a fair amount of tickets, and I rarely make a sale through StubHub and my prices are always lower than market. I sell 95% of the tickets I have through Craigslist. So here's a challenge for you: incorporate Craigslist ticket listings.
Concerts are now available at TicketStumbler.
<a href="http://ticketstumbler.com/new-stuff/2008/10/18/oh-the-horror-and-new-tickets/" rel="nofollow">http://ticketstumbler.com/new-stuff/2008/10/18/oh-the-horror...</a>
How is this different from <a href="http://www.ticketwood.com" rel="nofollow">http://www.ticketwood.com</a> I think they are the leaders in this sold out tickets market?