Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Apps Take Planning On Road For Tasks From Finding Best Hotel Deals To Translation

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jan, 2016 11:41 AM
    TORONTO — Cate Lorimer can't remember the last time she lugged a phrasebook while criss-crossing foreign lands on weeks-long adventures.
     
    When looking for help communicating with locals during a recent trip that took her to remote regions of Central America, she turned to a Spanish dictionary app on her phone.
     
    "When you're backpacking, space is limited," said the 29-year-old Toronto resident, an avid traveller who recently launched the trip-sharing site SocialTravellers.
     
    "It's so much easier to have your stuff on a phone."
     
    From booking hotel rooms to flagging airline deals and finding the best airport restaurants, cellphone apps are helping many travellers streamline their trip planning — and take it on the road.
     
    Three-quarters of Canadians planning to travel outside the country last summer said they would bring a smartphone or tablet and leave their laptop at home, according to a survey by the Conference Board of Canada. That's a significant increase from 2011, when only a third said they would.
     
    While messaging and taking photos remain the main use for smartphones on trips, about a third of Canadians said they planned to book hotels, car rentals or tours through their device while travelling, up from 23 per cent in 2011, the survey shows.
     
    "Very often, you want to make those sorts of bookings from the road — our laptops are put away in a bag somewhere and we want to do it from our smartphones," said Duncan Stewart, director of technology, media and telecommunications research for Deloitte Canada.
     
    The use of travel apps is likely to increase as new technology makes it easier to make purchases through an app without having to fill out lengthy forms, he said.
     
    Helen Hatzis, who heads the travel site Weekend Jaunt, said she has about 16 travel-related apps on her phone and relies on them for everything from budgeting to translation.
     
    "Because I do weekend travel, I don't have a lot of time and I try to maximize my time and using apps helps," she said.
     
    Some have purely practical purposes. One app, Expensify, allows Hatzis to take photos of her receipts and keep expenses on track. Another, GasBuddy, helps find the nearest gas station while on road trips.
     
    Others aim to elevate the travel experience.
     
    An app called LoungeBuddy, which catalogues lounges in more than 800 airports worldwide, helped Hatzis find a comfortable place to recover during a stopover on a long flight to India, she said.
     
    "You can literally go in there, you can shower, you can have something to eat, you can take a nap, and it really helps ease the jet lag," she said.
     
    Travellers who rely on apps abroad can rack up hefty phone bills, but Lorimer said she avoids roaming charges by connecting to free Wi-Fi in hostels, coffee shops and other locations.
     
    Here are other apps that Canadians might find useful for travel:
     
    — Hopper (Apple and Android): The app, made by a company based in Montreal and Boston, analyzes flight price data to tell travellers when to buy their tickets. It was the only travel app on the Apple App Store's best of 2015 list.
     
    — City Mapper (Apple and Android): A guide to the best transit routes in more than a dozen cities around the world, including real-time departure times and disruptions.
     
    — XE Currency (Apple and Android): Converts every currency in the world and saves the last updated rate so it can still be seen when there's no Internet.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Aspiring To Retire? Welcome To Agra

    Aspiring To Retire? Welcome To Agra
    As more and more educated youngsters of Agra flee to greener pastures, the Taj city is becoming a haven for retirees, who find the slow pace of life here in tune with their ageing rhythm.

    Aspiring To Retire? Welcome To Agra

    They Grow Up So Fast: Obama's 17-Year-Old Daughter Joins Other Seniors In Scoping Out Colleges

    They Grow Up So Fast: Obama's 17-Year-Old Daughter Joins Other Seniors In Scoping Out Colleges
    WASHINGTON — Michelle Obama's message for high school seniors fretting about their college prospects is simple.

    They Grow Up So Fast: Obama's 17-Year-Old Daughter Joins Other Seniors In Scoping Out Colleges

    Quebec Rejects Ottawa's Request To Put Right-to-die Legislation On Hold

    Quebec Rejects Ottawa's Request To Put Right-to-die Legislation On Hold
    Quebec's health and justice ministers are saying they will forge ahead with the province's right-to-die law despite a request from Ottawa to put it on hold.

    Quebec Rejects Ottawa's Request To Put Right-to-die Legislation On Hold

    Online Shoppers Opt For Smartphones Over Tablets And Desktops This Holiday Season

    Online Shoppers Opt For Smartphones Over Tablets And Desktops This Holiday Season
    NEW YORK — If the beginning of the holiday season is any indication, it could be a merry mobile Christmas for shoppers.

    Online Shoppers Opt For Smartphones Over Tablets And Desktops This Holiday Season

    Online Shoppers Opt For Smartphones Over Tablets And Desktops This Holiday Season

    Online Shoppers Opt For Smartphones Over Tablets And Desktops This Holiday Season
    NEW YORK — If the beginning of the holiday season is any indication, it could be a merry mobile Christmas for shoppers.

    Online Shoppers Opt For Smartphones Over Tablets And Desktops This Holiday Season

    NASA Finding Bolsters Indian Theory On Black Hole

    NASA Finding Bolsters Indian Theory On Black Hole
    According to mainstream astrophysicists, extremely massive stars collapse into ultra compact objects called black holes whose gravitational field is so powerful that even light cannot escape from its imaginary boundary called "event horizon".

    NASA Finding Bolsters Indian Theory On Black Hole