Oh look, a day off for the environment. I’ll take that as a win.
That’s one of the few things I miss about the COVID lockdowns. Far less people travelling meant a lot less noise and more clean air.
I’m not sure what it says about us when it takes a disaster to help the planet.
Discovering how quickly pollution levels dropped was eye opening, I’m sure a lot of people noticed the reporting on that globally.
Sadly it may never happen again, but I hope it does even if it’s after my lifetime.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Passengers have described “bedlam” at UK airport check-ins after a global IT outage on what was due to be the busiest day for flying since the start of the Covid pandemic, while train networks have also been disrupted.
Dean Seddon, 42, from Plymouth, told the PA news agency he had queued since 6am for a flight to Miami with Norse Atlantic Airways.
The outage hit after the first wave of UK morning flight departures had checked in, sparing some from the worst of the disruption.
The budget airlines Ryanair and easyJet said the situation was out of their control and advised passengers to arrive at airports early, with some flights switching to manual check-in and handwritten boarding passes.
Ryanair urged passengers whose flights were cancelled to leave airports and use its website or app, once restored, to find options for rebookings or refunds.
At Palma de Mallorca airport, Jemma Wheeler, 30, told the BBC that her family of five had been standing in a queue for three hours.
The original article contains 783 words, the summary contains 168 words. Saved 79%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
And Waitrose is only taking cash FFS!
Thankfully everywhere I’ve been today was still taking cards. I had to have an emergency rummage for some extra notes this morning just in case.
First world problems, eh?
Where are they going to store it all?