Usage soars as travel site app allows choice of aircraft

Share post:

With recent aerial mishaps, travelers are increasingly exercising the power of choice—specifically, the type of aircraft they fly on. Travel site Kayak’s aircraft filter, a feature since 2019, has seen a meteoric 15-fold spike in usage after the incident involving an Alaska Airlines’ plane.

This surge has propelled Kayak to enhance the filter’s visibility and ease of use. Now, passengers can deftly sidestep certain models, notably the grounded 737 Max 9, a move once typical of only the most experienced flyers. The result? A heightened sense of control and confidence for the safety-conscious traveler.

Airlines feel the turbulence, too; United Airlines has signaled a profit warning, noting the weight of these choices on their bottom line. And the timing couldn’t be more pressing—recent reports of a rogue nose wheel from a Delta Air Lines jet making a solo roll on the tarmac suggest that this filter will only continue to be a go-to feature for flyers.

Sources include: The Guardian

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Related articles

Resignations at OpenAI. Hashtag Trending for Friday, May 17, 2024

The question changes from “where’s Ilya” to what took so long?  Did Musk’s Neuralink team know there might...

Google does the unthinkable – reportedly erasing a 125 billion dollar pension fund

It's reported that Google inadvertently erased the Google Cloud account of UniSuper, an Australian pension fund valued at...

MIT students exploit blockchain vulnerability to steal 25 million dollars

Two MIT students have been implicated in a highly sophisticated cryptocurrency heist, where they reportedly exploited a vulnerability...

iOS update brings back photos users thought were permanently deleted

After a recent iOS update, a number of iPhone users have found themselves facing unexpected blasts from the...

Become a member

New, Relevant Tech Stories. Our article selection is done by industry professionals. Our writers summarize them to give you the key takeaways