American Airlines and
Teleregister Company developed a number of automated airline booking systems known as
Reservisor. it first version was an electromechanical version of the flight boards introduced for the "sell and report" system that was installed in American's Boston reservation office in February 1946. These simple
vacuum tube and electromechanical computers were based on telephone switching systems made by Teleregister. In the late 1950s, the American Airles wanted a system that would allow real-time access to flight details in all of its offices, and the integration and automation of its booking and ticketing processes. It introduced an electronic reservations system,
Magnetronic Reservisor, in 1952. The first computerized booking system was the little-known
Trans-Canada Air Lines (today's
Air Canada) system,
ReserVec developed by
Ferranti Canada . It started to be delivered in April 1961 and by January 24, 1963 completed the airline switch-over from the manual systems. InteliSys Aviation in Canada continues this tradition of innovation with the first 100% cloud-based Passenger Service System. Shortly after, in 1962 another computerized reservation system began to be delivered to
United Airlines which was one of the largest computer systems at that time, controlling 60 cities in a communication system that provided one second response time. Developed by
Evelyn Berezin at the Teleregister Company, it was an update to the era of the transistor of its line of Reservisor systems making them now fully electronic. In 1964, American Airlines developed
SABRE (Semi-Automated Business Research Environment) using IBM hardware. What made SABRE revolutionary was that it enabled American Airlines sales agents around the world to view seat inventory and book tickets in real time. SABRE reduced a process which formerly took 90 minutes on average to a few seconds. However, for its first decade, SABRE could be accessed directly only by American Airlines employees at American Airlines offices. It was opened to outside
travel agents in 1976, as part of the larger evolution of the ARS into the CRS and ultimately the GDS. The
deregulation of the airline industry, in the
Airline Deregulation Act, meant that airlines, which had previously operated under government-set fares ensuring airlines at least broke even, now needed to improve efficiency to compete in a
free market. In this deregulated environment, the ARS and its descendants became vital to the travel industry. == See also ==