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- Airline's food costs more than the flight
- The secret confessions of hotel employees
- 7 sci-fi innovations that will change travel
- How to travel with your dog
- 7 hotels that changed China
Airline's food costs more than the flight Posted: 28 Aug 2012 11:22 PM PDT by Zoe Li Frugal passengers determined to save money may want to pack their own lunchboxes, especially if they've booked with Ryanair. A meal onboard the no-frills Irish airline can cost more than the airfare, a new study by travelsupermarket.com shows. The survey found that some budget airlines marked up their food and drink as much as 10 times the price at supermarkets. Still water on Aer Lingus was marked up 1,083 percent. But Ryanair was the worst overall offender. The Dublin-based airline is famed for its innovative approach to making a profit -- see their 5 money-saving schemes that would impress Scrooge. When passengers are held hostage 37,000 feet aloft aboard Ryanair, they are charged £2.76 (US$4.36) for a half-liter bottle of still water. read more |
The secret confessions of hotel employees Posted: 28 Aug 2012 03:10 PM PDT What happens when someone asks hotel staff to share "things that are disturbing/interesting/unsanitary about hotel rooms" on user-generated news site Reddit? "I'm a bellman and valet at a resort. I can give you free water bottles, tampons, valet parking, tours, shuttle rides, reservations, dry cleaning, hell even an upgrade to a better room if you just ASK ME. But no one ever does because they think I'm just a doorman. Oh and room service isn't open all night so the kitchen cooks meals (like sandwiches and dessert and what not) and leaves them in a fridge near the front desk in case a guest checks in at like three in the morning and wants food. Anyways in the morning there's just free food sitting there, every morning I get a free cheesecake if I want, but the guest could have it if he or she asked." "For the slower hotel goers. Do Not Disturb signs on a door most certainly means you will not get housekeeping service at any point during the day. I don't know how many people I have had to tell this to." "I worked at a hotel with a few friends of mine while at university. The biggest thing I found out while working there was that six months previously, a guest had hanged himself in one of the rooms and was found by the cleaner. From what I gather, the hotel was particularly empty at the time anyway and it was mid-afternoon, so they did their best to keep it quiet. The police arrived with the appropriate people, took away the body, without any guest having the faintest idea what was going on. It never even appeared in local news." 10. Timing read more |
7 sci-fi innovations that will change travel Posted: 28 Aug 2012 03:01 PM PDT by Hoishan Chan You may recall from January a story about a Canadian man who was able to cross the U.S. border using a scan of his passport on his iPad. Turns out that wasn't entirely true, as he also had his birth certificate and driver's license on him. Nevertheless, it's assumed this kind of digital identification will be part of the future of travel, just as some airlines already allow digital boarding passes on smartphones. More high-tech innovations that appear beyond reality now could soon become standard. Here are seven innovations that could just change, even enhance, the travel experience. 1. Driverless carsAutoNOMOS Labs tested its first driverless car in Berlin in September 2011. A similar project has persuaded the State of Nevada to allow Google to test its autonomous cars on Nevada roads. read more |
Posted: 28 Aug 2012 11:40 AM PDT by Karla Cripps Don't deprive your dog of the opportunity to dress up in tacky tourist outfits. Take him on holiday with you. At the five-star Fairmont Whistler Hotel in British Columbia, cocker spaniels, golden retrievers and even German shepherds can be seen strutting through the hallways with their owners. Out the hotel's back entrance, stainless steel dog bowls filled with fresh water are set out to rehydrate tired pets returning from brisk walks in the mountain air. Long gone are the days when pet owners were banished to grim roadside motels with their contraband canines. Thanks to a surge in the number of pet-friendly hotels, airlines with pet-friendly policies and pet immigration guidelines to facilitate international travel, more people than ever are taking their dogs overseas with them. "I travel with my dog everywhere," says TV's "Dog Whisperer," Cesar Millan. "It's the right thing to do. In Mexico, we went to the market -- dogs follow. Went to school -- dogs follow." read more |
Posted: 28 Aug 2012 10:00 AM PDT by Steve Bellman Hotels, in the Western sense, are a relatively new addition to China -- the oldest still standing only date back about 150 years. But in that time, they have formed the backdrop to many turbulent moments in China's modern history. Here are the hotels where you can still stay, and the history they've witnessed. The Astor Hotel, TianjinImagine tangoing with China's last emperor in this very ballroom. However, the eight-story, 152-room establishment also witnessed some of the final grand days of China's last emperor, Pu Yi (爱新觉罗•溥仪). read more |
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