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    Top Travel News of 2011


    The interior of the new 787 Dreamliner aircraft. (Photo courtesy of the Boeing Company)
    For travelers, 2011 was the year of the shake-up. Old certainties were challenged; former ways of doing things, rethought. Travelers saw Southwest merge with AirTran. Deal-a-day site Groupon gave online travel agencies their first serious competition in ages. The year's other online travel sensation, Airbnb—a site that offers lodging in people's homes—dealt with news that one renter had trashed and robbed a site member's home, renewing questions about the kindness of strangers.

    Looking abroad, the revolts in North Africa and the Middle East shifted travel patterns—most dramatically in Cairo, where famous museum halls echoed emptily for months. Cruise lines suspended stops at a couple of Mexican ports, prompting local officials to introduce measures to better protect passengers. Meanwhile, some international travelers took advantage of opportunities to fly the new, high-tech Dreamliner 787 from Boeing.

    Back at home, the government tested new ideas in airport security and permitted Americans to visit Cuba as part of licensed educational tour groups. Finally, officials opened Manhattan's oft-debated memorial to the victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks.
     
    Here, a chance to cap off 2011 and learn (or remember, in some cases) the biggest stories of the year that affect how we travel and see the world now—and in years to come.

    Flying Started to Get More Comfortable

    Anyone who swears that it's just about the journey, and not the destination, has never logged hours crammed into an economy-class seat on an airplane that feels as dry as the Sahara. But a new era in comfier cabins dawned in 2011, thanks to the debut of a high-tech aircraft design. In October, Boeing's latest jumbo jet, the 787 Dreamliner, took its inaugural flight. The 787's cabins maintain higher humidity levels than traditional ones, sparing passengers from dry eyes and mouths. The 787s also pressurize their cabins to a more earth-like level than older planes, avoiding the altitude sickness some fliers feel in the air. They're quieter machines, too, and sound like you're riding in a hybrid car instead of a gas-powered one. The first airlines to use the aircraft are in Asia; United will bring the plane into U.S. service next year. Boeing's aerospace rival Airbus plans to launch similarly designed planes, dubbed the A350 series, within a year or two. It looks like high-tech cabins will soon be commonplace. Sure, no matter what a plane is made of, flights remain nasty, brutish, and not short enough. But we applaud every aircraft improvement travelers can get.

    Cruise Lines Become Wary of Mexico

    Cancún, Mexico (Photo courtesy of Jeremy Hetzel/Flickr)Cancún, Mexico (Photo courtesy of Jeremy Hetzel/Flickr)Mention Mexico, and some Americans think of violence linked to a government crackdown on drug trafficking and turf battles between various narcos. Case in point: In Mazatlán, two visitors were shot in the parking lot of a hotel frequented by foreign tourists, prompting cruise lines to suspend port calls. In the first half of 2011, the number of cruise-ship passengers to Mexico dropped from about 500,000 to 58,000. Puerto Vallarta faced similar security concerns after incidents there. Yet nearly all of the violence has taken place far from cruise ports. Cancún, for instance, has remained safe, except for an attack in August on a bar in an outlying residential area. At Mazatlán, officials have put into place additional security measures, too, such as beefed-up police patrols and strict supervision of tour buses as passengers board them for day excursions. So expect more cruise lines to return to full itineraries soon. Princess Cruises Lines, for one, will begin calling on Mazatlán and Puerto Vallarta again in 2012.

    The Arab Spring Causes Unrest in Popular Tourist Destinations

    Nothing prepared us for what happened across the Arab world this year, with uprisings toppling repressive regimes in Tunisia, Yemen, and Libya and protests continuing in Bahrain. But it was the revolution in Egypt that set off the biggest political shockwaves — and prompted the largest travel industry shake-up, too. Egypt is thought to have drawn only 10 million international visitors in 2011, down from 14.8 million a year earlier. Experts note that not a single tourist has suffered a scratch because of the turmoil to date. But the ongoing political uncertainty concerns many, and understandably so. Here's hoping that the country's commitment to keeping travelers safe remains solid during Egypt's continuing march to democracy.

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    400 comments

    • Lamart  •  Bhubaneswar, India  •  2 months ago
      Thanks for nice sharing.
    • Heracleo  •  Manila, Philippines  •  2 months ago
      nice
    • Captain Spaulding  •  5 months ago
      Dibs on that seat in the middle.
      • Predator141 5 months ago
        hahaha
      • MsgCritic 5 months ago
        LOL! That's the first one I noticed...
      • Boricua's 5 months ago
        I would feel rare if i sit in that chair !
    • David  •  5 months ago
      A Dreamliner indeed, if you are traveling first or business class, with their prices! But economy will still be as cramped as a sardine in a can.
      • LittleFox 5 months ago
        but you won'y be dry & stuffy now!
      • sezyousezme 5 months ago
        Don't forget the screaming kid next to you who needs changing.
      • abeng 5 months ago
        Sezy, as if you were not a kid before. Were you a very nice child when you were a kid that you don't scream or cry at all?
    • TiffanyS  •  5 months ago
      I would never allow a stranger to use my home. Especially one picked out by a website
      • Rick 5 months ago
        Can I come stay with you?
    • Jason  •  5 months ago
      Haha. That one seat in the middle of the plane. Forever alone :P
      • A 5 months ago
        lol
      • bassclef13 5 months ago
        but you would always have people walking by you on both sides....
      • Lance 5 months ago
        hahaha lmao
    • Speedbird531  •  5 months ago
      Whats about the 787 is such a game changer they can add all the fancy mood lighting and make the plane out of carbon fiber but the airlines are still going to try and jam as many seats in there as possible no airline is going to have seats like the ones in that picture.
      • Yin 5 months ago
        lol look at the seats at the back of the picture
    • DANS  •  5 months ago
      I don't know anything about flying in the 787. But my flying adventure this year was enjoying a very crowded, no leg-room no snacks no drinks (unless u wanted to pay), late-at-night, delayed flight with a lot of SPIRIT. I really think our Ford pickup would have been more comfortable....... But when you buy cheap, you get cheap........
    • BB  •  5 months ago
      I love to travel. I have been to 5 countries so far and plan to visit my 6th at the end of this week! (Indonesia!) I have been to Mexico three times and have nothing but wonderful memories. I think it's smart to do your research on the safety of the place which you want to visit, and there are certainly parts of Mexico (as well as the world at large) that are best avoided. But Mexico is vast and diverse. To condem and avoid the whole country is silly. And to say 'Never leave the USA!' is just plain ignorant.
    • Jackie  •  5 months ago
      The problem is most dreamliners dont look like the photos released by boeing. It's a nice plane but be prepared for pretty much the same thing as usual.
    • Ghulam  •  Islamabad, Pakistan  •  4 months ago
      Why cruise lines avoided Mexico." Is there really anyone on this Earth who didn't already know the reason? Hmm?
      Ghulam Mustafa Lahore Pakistan +923004758809
    • Concerned American  •  5 months ago
      Mexican border towns are 'famous' for cops who hit you with 'must pay me now' traffic tickets . . . it is top-to-bottom corruption.
    • LAE  •  5 months ago
      Southwest is still the best. If you change your ticket, all you pay is the difference in price. No outrageous change ticket fee!!! TWO bags checked for FREE!!!
    • scooby doo  •  5 months ago
      The Mexican police are a bunch of corrupt badits and theifs. They will pull you over and try to demand money from you.
    • timmy smith  •  5 months ago
      Just FYI check your facts...Southwest did not MERGE with Airtran....Southwest ACQUIRED Airtran. Look up the difference
    • patrick terrancem  •  5 months ago
      Southwest Airlines ( uncommonly, the best in the Air Carrier business in the United States Today, 'Acquired' AirTran. GO SOUTHWEST !
      Show `em how to do it, baby!
      P.S.
      They need to come to ANC ! . . . Waiting patiently.
      Semper Fly, guys (`n Gals).
    • Lorenzo  •  5 months ago
      nice
    • spearhead  •  5 months ago
      Interesting the triple seats in the far back of the 787 picture...
    • Fed up with political cor ...  •  5 months ago
      Is that the "dunce" chair in the middle?
    • TaiMaiShu  •  5 months ago
      Southwest is still on of the better carriers out there no bag fees, no change fees, and vouchers are easy to use. I had to fly United domestically once and had to upgrade just to get a normal seat size instead of being canned in like sardines in the back, that was additional to the $60.00 to check bags (not overweight).

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