06 November 2009 x Close
According to a consumer organisation, the use of self service check-in in airports should help to improve the passenger experience as they will spend less time waiting in queues to board their flights. According to SITA, an aviation and IT specialist, 80% of airports across the globe are looking at introducing the system as their main method of checking in.
Read More at Just the Flight

Parthenon, Athens © GNTO
The Olympic Games were spawned in ancient classical Greece,
along with democracy and the fundamentals of philosophy, science
and mathematics. Modern Greece is better known as a great place to
vacation rather than a centre of learning and culture. Today the
country attracts by offering simple pleasures: delicious food at
reasonable prices, local wine, beautiful beaches, sunshine, quaint
villages, a seemingly endless lacework of coastline and little
islands full of scenic surprises.
The country exudes traditional charm, particularly on its
ever-popular islands, which cling to their stereotypical
architecture and way of life despite being often over-run by
tourists. Black-clad women still deliver vegetables to island
tavernas on panniered donkeys, while bronzed, lined fishermen sit
in the sun, drink thick coffee, and play dominoes or dice. The
tourist infrastructure has intruded in many respects, but the
timeless aspect of whitewashed buildings clustered on hillsides
around narrow pebbled alleys has been retained. The myriad islands
in the Aegean Sea are easily accessible from Piraeus, the historic
harbour of Greece's mainland capital, Athens, by ferry or
hydrofoil, offering a unique chance for 'island-hopping'. Many of
the larger islands also have airports with connections to Athens or
seasonally with major European cities.
On the mainland the city of Athens in the south is sprawling,
overcrowded and polluted but nevertheless enthrals visitors, while
Thessaloniki in the north is vibrant and modern with a Byzantine
flavour. Athens is dominated by its major landmark, the Parthenon:
the remains of other wonders of the ancient Greek classical world
are to be found mainly on the Peloponnese Peninsula, south of
Corinth, the gateway to a veritable treasure trove of history.
Greece and Greeks welcome with open arms the thousands of
visitors that flock to admire their national assets every year - no
one leaves without having been warmed, both by the sun and the
hospitality.