When your luggage goes missing, it’s bad enough. But when your luggage itself is the reason you’re traveling in the first place, it gets considerably worse. This passenger used an AirTag to track a bike his airline lost.
Luckily for Barry Sherry, when it happened to him, he had a secret weapon: a luggage tracker. Sherry was traveling from his home in Virginia to Europe for the cycling trip of a lifetime: a week riding through the Swiss Alps, followed by another in Luxembourg, where his cycling group was riding with two former Tour de France competitors, and then a third week cycling in Finland with friends. It was, he says, to be his last cycling trip to Europe. “I’m 68 – I’m getting old,” he says.
” Sitting alone in that house in the mountains, wondering if BA were ever going to deliver his bike, and wondering whether they’d replace the item if they lost it – the replacement value is now $8,000 – was too much. “I was in the most beautiful place on Earth and I just couldn’t enjoy where I was,” he says. “After one day, I left, I couldn’t stand it anymore.” He went to Lake Lucerne instead, and on to Sissach, to stay with his friend Ben, who he should have been riding with.
日本 最新ニュース, 日本 見出し
Similar News:他のニュース ソースから収集した、これに似たニュース記事を読むこともできます。
Your Android phone can now alert you if an AirTag is stalking youGoogle is starting to roll out its unknown tracker alerts, so Android users can be notified if an AirTag is stalking them.
続きを読む »
Google rolls out anti-stalking measures for AirTag and other Bluetooth trackers | EngadgetGoogle rolls out anti-stalking measures for AirTag and other Bluetooth trackers
続きを読む »
Google finally brings unknown AirTag tracker alerts to Android devicesGoogle has just announced the rollout of unknown tracker alerts for Android devices.
続きを読む »
Manassas airport one step closer to providing passenger flight serviceThe plan would transform the largest general aviation airport in Virginia to become one of nine airports across the state that offer passenger service.
続きを読む »