Miller thought this answer something of a drag. He continued by wondering what difference it made, as he could easily have chosen to hold the camera, which, presumably, would have been fine. Even if the footage wouldn’t have been quite so perfectly dramatic.
United Airlines expands US capital services
United Airlines launched twice-daily flights to Asheville from Washington Dulles on 14 February, with the former of the two airports baking this exceptional cake to mark the new service, highlighting the many opportunities that passengers have for travel via the airline’s US capital hub. No other airline links the two airports at this time.
- United Airlines launched two new regional routes from Washington Dulles (IAD) on 14 February, with it offering twice-daily services to Asheville (AVL) in North Carolina and Lexington (LEX) in Kentucky. The Star Alliance member will operate both the 594- and 629-kilometre sectors using its fleet of 50-seat CRJ 200s, which are operated by Air Wisconsin. Neither route will face direct competition. “Our community has asked for the addition of a daily non-stop route to Washington for many years,” said Lew Bleiweis, A.A.E., Executive Director of the Greater Asheville Regional Airport Authority, about its connection to the US capital. “From Dulles Airport, travellers can connect to destinations around the globe. This route also makes Asheville more accessible to domestic and international travellers, opening the region to more opportunities for business, tourism and convention air travel.”
United Airlines to Present at Barclays Industrial Select Conference 2019
CHICAGO, Feb. 18, 2019 /PRNewswire/ — United Airlines will present at Barclays Industrial Select Conference on Wednesday, February 20. United Airlines’ Vice President of Pricing and Revenue Management Dave Bartels and Vice President of Finance and CFO of Commercial Jonathan Ireland will present at the conference beginning at 1:15 p.m. ET / 12:15 p.m. CT.
The live webcast will be available on the investor relations section of United’s website at ir.united.com. The company will archive the audio webcast on the website within 24 hours of the presentation, and the webcast will be available for a limited time.
About United
United’s shared purpose is “Connecting People. Uniting the World.” We are more focused than ever on our commitment to customers through a series of innovations and improvements designed to help build a great experience: Every customer. Every flight. Every day. Together, United Airlines and United Express operate approximately 4,800 flights a day to 353 airports across five continents. In 2018, United and United Express operated more than 1.7 million flights carrying more than 158 million customers. United is proud to have the world’s most comprehensive route network, including U.S. mainland hubs in Chicago, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, New York/Newark, San Francisco and Washington, D.C. United operates 770 mainline aircraft and the airline’s United Express carriers operate 559 regional aircraft. United is a founding member of Star Alliance, which provides service to 193 countries via 28 member airlines. For more information, visit united.com, follow @United on Twitter and Instagram or connect on Facebook. The common stock of United’s parent, United Continental Holdings, Inc., is traded on the Nasdaq under the symbol “UAL”.
SOURCE United Airlines
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Air Travel Tips for Your Most Comfortable Flight Ever
A plane isn’t the ideal place to unwind and relax, but there are certain things you can do while sitting to make your flight a little more tolerable.
Rachel Grice, a registered yoga teacher and a contributing editor at LiveStrong says, “The healthiest way to sit on a plane is actually to avoid sitting—or at least sitting still—for as much of the flight as you can. When you are sitting, though, you want to have good posture just like you would sitting anywhere else.”
“Just like sitting at a desk, you want to take breaks to get up and move and stretch,” she says. “Walk up and down the aisle or stretch in the aisle. You don’t have to have a full-on yoga session, but a quad stretch, arms stretch, and some side bends are good options.”
Another storm complicates road, air travel in Southwest Colorado
The Colorado Department of Transportation reminds motorists to check for updated weather information:
Visit www.cotrip.org for real-time road conditions, highway closures, average speeds, photos, live cameras streaming traffic, trucking information and more.Call 511 to listen to recorded information about road conditions, projected trip travel times and trucker information.Receive free email/text alerts at www.codot.gov/travel; choose from a list of subscription options at the “get connected” tab.Follow @coloradodot on Twitter for traveler information and other news.Like CDOT at www.facebook.com/coloradodot to receive news and traveler information.Visit www.codot.gov/travel/winter-driving to get information about road conditions, what to keep in a vehicle during the winter, how to safely pass a snowplow, commercial-vehicle requirements, seasonal closures, snow removal and avalanche control.Herald Staff
The future of aviation: Give up your supersonic air travel dreams
In the year 2044, our cities might be energized by fusion power plants, our sleek cars may all run on electricity, and our doctors might regularly employ gene-editing to cure blindness.
But our airplanes will probably still fly at the same speeds they did half a century ago: between 550 and 600 mph.
Supersonic flight — which is to say speeds that exceed the speed of sound (768 mph) and can dramatically slash flight times — died out for civilians in 2003 with the retirement of the narrowly-shaped Concorde planes, which for 27 years cruised at 1,300 mph between the U.S. and Europe. “It failed,” Bob van der Linden, the Chairman of the Aeronautics Department of the Smithsonian Institution’s National Air and Space Museum, said in an interview. “It was a technological marvel, but it was too expensive to operate.”
Although a few ambitious supersonic startups like Boom Technology and Aerion Supersonic might successfully resurrect smaller business-style jets in the coming decades, commercial flying for the masses is unlikely to change much in the next quarter century, and beyond. Today’s traditional aviation paradigm works, it’s profitable, and it’s safe.
“Since the 1960s, the top speed of an airliner has not changed,” said van der Linden — and, he adds, he doesn’t see any reason that it will.
“In 20 to 25 years, air travel might not look a whole lot different from how it looks today,” Dan Bubb, a former pilot and now aviation historian at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, agreed over email.
“I don’t think we expect to see any disruptive technologies,” added Fotis Kopsaftopoulos, an assistant professor in the Department of Mechanical, Aerospace, and Nuclear Engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, in an interview.
The final landing of an Air France Concorde in 2003
Image: Jacek Bilski/imageBROKER/REX/Shutterstock
These future aircraft will likely look the same as they do now, too.
“There’s not too much room to change the shape — we need wings and a round fuselage,” Ryo Amano, a professor of mechanical engineering specializing in aerodynamics at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, said in an interview.
But one thing will surely change.
“You’ll see airliners becoming more efficient,” said van der Linden. “Any breakthrough will be for efficiency’s sake.”
This means burning less fuel, resulting in higher airline profits. It’s already happening. Some new planes, like the Boeing 787 and the colossal Airbus 380, are built with lighter “composite materials” rather than heavier old-school metals, so they burn less fuel.
An Airbus A380, the world’s largest passenger airliner
Image: Lex Rayton/imageBROKER/REX/Shutterstock
“They are lightweight and very strong,” said Kopsaftopoulos.
New, more efficient engines are burning less fuel, too.
“You don’t really see many of the changes, but inside the engine system there is a tremendous amount of improvement,” said Amano.
Supersonic dreams
Aviation experts are in wide agreement: Flying at supersonic speeds would slash flight times (imagine a 2.5-hour trip from New York to Los Angeles or London to NYC in under 3.5 hours), and as the Concorde proved, the blazing-fast engines and aerodynamic design technologies do exist. But there are a slew of formidable obstacles.
Traditional airliners might be slower, but they’re moneymakers. In contrast, flying faster burns significantly more fuel. That means pricier flights.
“A conventional airliner gets better mileage than an SST [supersonic plane],” said van der Linden. “It’s as simple as that.”
What’s more, there was little demand to fly on the 1,300 mph Concorde planes. A seat was just too expensive. “The cost for one seat probably cost five times more than [a seat on] a 747,” noted Amano.
A NASA conception of a supersonic plane
Image: nasa
“Let’s face it, the overwhelming majority of citizens are not millionaires,” added van der Linden. “There’s not enough traffic for high-priced stuff.”
But if a supersonic plane did ever take to the skies, it would likely be smaller plane intended for wealthier demographics.
“It would be wonderful to see the return of the Concorde, but if the aircraft returns, it will be a much slimmed-down, more fuel-efficient version,” said Babb.
A spokesperson for the supersonic startup Boom Technology said they’re designing aircraft that “can operate profitably while charging the same fares as today’s business class” over oceanic routes. For perspective, a round-trip business class ticket between JFK and London generally costs between $3,000 and $8,000.
SEE ALSO: The future of flying is electric planes
Like the auto industry, it’s daunting for any startup, like Boom, to break into the aviation world. They don’t just need billions of dollars, they have to prove to the vigilant Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) that their supersonic planes are profoundly safe.
“The overwhelming majority of citizens are not millionaires”
“I wish them luck,” said van der Linden.
Beyond financial hurdles, supersonics also have to contend with environmental woes. A recent report produced by the International Council on Clean Transportation — an organization that provides technical and scientific analysis to environmental regulators — estimated that a worldwide fleet of 2,000 supersonic planes by 2035 would emit prodigious amounts of carbon into the atmosphere.
“The environmental impact of building that many planes would be severe,” said Dan Rutherford, the ICCT’s program director for marine and aviation.
Such supersonic fuel-guzzling creates uncertainty for airlines that might be considering them, as the United Nation’s aviation organization will almost certainly tighten emission rules to meet greater society’s climate and environmental targets. “Everyone is wondering what environmental regulations they will need to meet,” noted Rutherford.
And supersonic planes have one other mighty, unavoidable hurdle.
The booms.
Supersonic booms
Congress outlawed flying supersonic airliners over land in 1970, and for good reason. Sonic booms are thunder-like noises created when planes displace air and create powerful shockwaves, some of which slam into the ground. It’s much “like a boat creates a wake in the water,” explains NASA.
The booms jolt buildings, stir people awake, and can feel like a sharp earthquake. “If you’re not expecting them, they can be startling,” NASA aviation engineer David Richwine told Mashable last year.
This limits supersonic planes to oceanic routes, further reducing their ability to be mainstream airliners.
A supersonic plane displacing air in the sky
Image: nasa
For this reason, the startup Aerion Supersonic plans to fly over land just under the speed of sound (known as Mach 0.95) “without a sonic boom,” said a company spokesperson. But Aerion still has supersonic ambitions, and plans to develop planes that fly at around 920 mph (or 1.2 Mach), wherein the booms will dissipate before pummeling the ground.
Although overland travel is still illegal for the likes of Boom, Aerion, and others, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) may open the door for new supersonic planes to once again fly over land. This won’t happen anytime soon (the new supersonic planes don’t even exist), but the FAA is considering rules about noise certifications and other rules for supersonic planes — once the government settles on what boom levels are tolerable for us land dwellers.
“We have not published any rules as of yet — that’s still being worked out,” FAA spokesperson Henry Price said over the phone.
“The direction we’re going is in the fact sheet,” Price added, citing a webpage summarizing the proposed future rules for supersonic planes.
Likely to the delight of supersonic startups, in 2018 NASA started work on a prototypical supersonic plane, dubbed the X-Plane. The $247.5 million project isn’t slated to take off until 2021, but when it does, the 94-foot test craft will soar over American neighborhoods and urban areas. It’s an experiment: Are the booms from the innovative design mild enough for citizens to bear?
A conception of NASA’s quiet boom supersonic plane, flying over NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center in California
Image: nasa
It’s certainly possible that NASA will be successful. There’s a big group of aviation experts working on the project, and they have intriguing futuristic ideas, like plane exteriors that subtly morph in the air to tame sonic blasts. If all goes well, NASA’s experimental plane will turn sonic booms into muted thumps.
“The work that NASA’s doing might help that [sonic booms],” said van der Linden. “And a smaller plane might help that.”
“But you can’t eliminate it,” he added.
Even if NASA is successful (it often is), aviation companies seeking to break the sound barrier will have to build planes similar to that low-boom design, airlines will have to order them, and the plane must pass rigid FAA standards.
“Is it going to be worth pursuing by the airlines?” asked Kopsaftopoulos. “I’m not sure what’s going to happen.”
Beyond Speed
While most passengers in a quarter-century will still be slogging through the atmosphere at 575 mph, that doesn’t mean air travel won’t make other futuristic leaps.
Flying, battery-powered taxis — small aircraft intended to make shorter urban jaunts — could become a reality in the next decade.
“Central Park to Brooklyn or Jersey City using an air taxi — that is very exciting,” said Kopsaftopoulos.
There’s also considerable aviation industry interest in fully-electric commercial airplanes, noted Kopsaftopoulos.
“It is ideal — we’ll save huge amounts of fuel,” added Amano, who said perhaps the technology could be tested in smaller commercial planes in a decade or so. What’s more, there’s a number of electric plane startups forging ahead, modifying existing planes, and planning for tests.
A Boeing 737 Max: A new airliner largely built with an old, trustworthy design
Image: Elaine Thompson/AP/REX/Shutterstock
But in the end, whether an aircraft runs on a massive battery that sits in its belly or pricey fuels, it’s likely these planes will be flying at the speeds they’ve been flying since the mid-20th century.
Traveling at supersonic speeds is “astounding,” said van der Linden, who had the opportunity to experience the Concorde flying at 1,300 mph. “You are flying faster than the Earth is spinning,” he said, adding that it felt like traveling on a normal airliner.
But money wins the race. Our trusty, long-lived, old-school airliners are only replaced after decades and decades of service — by lighter, increasingly efficient planes with sleeker interiors, but never anything faster.
“Airliners do not break,” said van der Linden. “They do fade away, but they don’t die.”
WATCH: Ever wonder how the universe might end?
Airlines to add nonbinary gender options for tickets
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Airlines
Airlines are planning to present travelers who don’t identify as either male or female more options when they book their flights.
Airlines for America, an industry group that represents some of the largest U.S. carriers, including American Airlines, JetBlue Airways and Alaska Airlines, and the International Air Transport Association, which represents most of the world’s airlines, recently approved standards for nonbinary passenger identification.
The changes aim to bring airlines in line with nonbinary identification cards so that travelers’ reservations match their IDs. Several states including California and Oregon offer nonbinary options on identification cards and other documents.
United Airlines in the coming weeks will allow travelers to choose from four options when they book their tickets: male, female, undisclosed and unspecified. Travelers who do not identify with a gender will be able use the tile “Mx,” said Maddie King, a United spokeswoman. The measures aim to ensure that “all of our customers feel comfortable and welcome no matter how they self-identify, which is why we will begin offering our customers the ability to select the gender with which they most closely identify during the booking process.”
Delta Air Lines, which is not a member of the trade group, said in a statement that it plans to add a nonbinary gender option to its booking page. Southwest Airlines is considering adding the option as well.
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Nevada, United Airlines on 2019 sex exploitation list
The state of Nevada and United Airlines are newcomers to a 2019 watchdog list of the top 12 contributors to sexual exploitation in the U.S.
National Center on Sexual Exploitation artwork
The state of Nevada, Sports Illustrated magazine and United Airlines are 2019 newcomers to the Dirty Dozen list of the top purveyors of sexual exploitation.
Nevada enslaves women through legalized prostitution and United Airlines has not addressed passenger reports of inflight sexual assault and harassment, the National Center on Sexual Exploitation (NCOSE) said in releasing its 2019 Dirty Dozen List Feb. 11.
The Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue (SI), Netflix and Massage Envy spa also made for the first time the Dirty Dozen list of companies that promote and enable sexual exploitation.
“No corporation or mainstream entity should profit from or facilitate sexual exploitation,” Haley Halverson, NCOSE vice president of advocacy and outreach, said in releasing the list. “Unfortunately, many well established brands and organizations in America do just that.”
Nevada’s legalization of prostitution, active in 10 counties, has enabled the state to become the largest illegal sex trader in the country, with 63 percent more activity there than in New York state, the nearest aggressor, NCOSE said.
“Under this legal framework, women are consumables,” said Lisa Thompson, NCOSE vice president of policy and research. “Like all systems of prostitution, Nevada’s sexploitation industry has a predatory dependence on women facing dire economic circumstances, and oftentimes with childhood histories of neglect and sexual abuse.” Women are sometimes recruited from jails, their bonds paid by brothel owners, NCOSE said.
United Airlines has exhibited systemic inappropriate reactions to sexual harassment in flight, NCOSE said.
While complaints have occurred on “virtually every airline,” Halverson said, “United aircrews have apparently received especially ineffective training.” The airline “appears to be chronically ill-prepared to address the growing problem of viewing pornography on airplanes, which creates a culture of sexual harassment.” In the enclosed environment of air travel, she said, children likely would be exposed to pornography.
Among other top abusers, SI peddles women’s bodies for public consumption, Massage Envy mishandles complaints of sexual assault committed during massages, and Netflix promotes child prostitution, NCOSE said, notably in its original series “Baby.”
Returning from 2018 on the seventh annual list are Amazon, Google, HBO, Roku, EBSCO Information Services, STEAM online video game distributors and Twitter.
The Dirty Dozen list “is an activism tool that gives the power back to individuals to speak out against corporatized sexual exploitation,” Halverson said. CVS Pharmacy’s removal of the SI swimsuit issue from checkout counters is one of NCOSE’s latest victories, Halverson said.
Among other NCOSE’s successes, Halverson said, Google no longer links pornographic videos to advertisements; Hilton Worldwide and other hotel chains no longer offer pornographic movies on demand; Walmart has removed Cosmopolitan Magazine from its checkout aisles; and the U.S. Department of Defense no longer offers pornographic magazines on military bases.
NCOSE markets itself as “the leading national organization exposing the links between all forms of sexual exploitation such as child sexual abuse, prostitution, sex trafficking and the public health crisis of pornography.”
NCOSE’s Dirty Dozen list and accompanying narratives are available at endsexualexploitation.org/dirtydozen-2019/.
Jeremiah McCarthy Jr. of Hyde Park, at 70, avid golfer, United Airlines worker
Jeremiah “Michael” McCarthy Jr. of Hyde Park died Friday. He was 70.
He was an avid golfer and enjoyed his time and friends at George Wright Golf Course.
He worked for United Airlines until retirement.
He is survived by a daughter, Lisa Russell; a son, Jeremiah III; four sisters, Jacquelyn, Patricia, M. Alannah McCarthy Fennell, and Kathleen Cody; three granddaughters; three grandsons; two nieces and a nephew.
A funeral Mass will be celebrated at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday at St. John Chrysostom Church, West Roxbury.
Interment will be in St. Joseph Cemetery, West Roxbury.
Arrangements by Robert J. Lawler Crosby Funeral Home, West Roxbury.
Holidays 2019: Experts forecast the most ‘chaotic’ year EVER for air travel – but why?
AirHelp’s shocking figures predict more than 28million UK travellers will face flight disruption this year.
The two-week Easter holiday is expected to be worst affected, with speculation there will be almost 10,000 UK flight disruptions.
In summer, it is believed to rise to more than 32,000.
It suggests over 250,000 UK flight departures could be disrupted because of this.
Therefore, the firm states those eligible to claim compensation for delayed and cancelled flights is predicted to surpass 11 million globally – the highest figure ever reported.