air new zealand

In this roundup, we see unique Christmas give from Spanair to their passengers, a safety video from Richard Simmons that should make you smile and a clip of John Travolta and Oliva Newton-John on the launch of the Qantas 380 service to LA.

{ 2 comments }

This first videos demonstrates the dangers of RFID chips that are now being embedded in credit cards and on our passports. Though the Sate Department claims that no data can be gleaned from these chips embedded in passports, the proof is unfortunately different. Following videos show Air New Zealand’s new Boeing trans-Pacific jetliner and Southwest takes major airlines to court over massive change fees.

{ 0 comments }

Boeing’s Skycouch coming to service on NZ Air, a new AA-BA “London shuttle” in the works, SWA to expand fleet type?

{ 2 comments }

Air New Zealand is the pioneer and is inaugurating the SkyCouch, which is scheduled to make its in-flight debut in a fleet of new Air New Zealand Boeing 777-300s.

{ 12 comments }

Air New Zealand has introduced a new sleeping seat for long-distance travel. It is called the skycouch. It is the first step up from coach. Basically, it allows two passengers to share what amounts it seems to a twin bed.

{ 7 comments }

Faulty landing gear door may be cause of collapse in United crash landing, Montana airport may replace TSA with private firm, Air New Zealand named airline of the year

{ 1 comment }

At the ATW Eco-Aviation conference in Washington, Air New Zealand revealed its biofuel flight data.

{ 1 comment }

Last week we reported that easyJet is introducing in-flight weddings. Air New Zealand thinks that it might have something there. The carrier has announced that it will be offering the world’s first matchmaking flight.

{ 0 comments }

Air New Zealand airs a racy new video with their staff wearing nothing but body paint. The airlines’ ontime statistics drop, but they are better than last year. And the FAA backs off auctioning slots in the NYC airspace — back to the drawing board.

{ 1 comment }

Air New Zealand and Japan Airlines will be two of the airlines ready to perform test flights using biofuel.

{ 1 comment }