Monthly Archives: April 2017

VIDEO: Seeing Aruba’s Spectacular Beaches From the Air

 

The Dutch Caribbean island of Aruba is blessed with some of the most beautiful beaches in the world, from the show-stopping Eagle Beach to the white sands of Palm Beach and the sparkling turquoise waters of Malmok.

And they get even more beautiful when you see them in a new way.

So in the latest CJ video, we bring you a new way to look at Aruba’s greatest beaches: from above.

— CJ

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Expedia: Luxury Travel Demand Is Rising in the Caribbean

 

Luxury travel demand is rising in the Caribbean, according to a new report from the Expedia group.

The online travel agency says demand for luxury properties rose across much of the Caribbean in 2016, with an overall increase in demand of 20 percent.

That included the Dominican Republic, which saw a 15 percent increase in demand for luxury properties; Jamaica, which saw a 30 percent increase; Aruba, which reported a 20 percent increase and the Turks and Caicos, which showed a 35 percent jump.

“We’ve seen luxury travel continue to thrive throughout the world, including the Caribbean,” said Demetrius Canton, Director of Market Management for the Caribbean, the Expedia group. “Expedia works closely with hotel partners seeking to tap into new and growing markets, including the luxury segment, by utilizing the company’s innovative technology and global marketing strategies.”

Luxury hotel stays also featured longer booking windows (an average of 55 days), and longer lengths of stay (4.3 days) when compared to one-to-three star hotels, which showed booking windows and length of stay of 37 days and 3.2 days, respectively.

Luxury hotels are considered four and five-star properties, which represent more than 50 percent of Expedia’s travel demand in the Caribbean.

The post Expedia: Luxury Travel Demand Is Rising in the Caribbean appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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The Caribbean’s Most Romantic Islands: Readers’ Choice 2017

 

What’s the most romantic island in the Caribbean?

Well, we put the question to the best authority on all matters Caribbean: Caribbean Journal readers, the world’s top concentration of Caribbean travel aficionados, with thousands of readers chiming in on their pick as the most romantic place in the Caribbean.

The winner? The island of Nevis, the tiny gem in the Eastern Caribbean that remains one of the region’s best-kept secrets and took home the crown as the #1 most romantic island in the Caribbean.

Click to see the rest of the top 10.

The post The Caribbean’s Most Romantic Islands: Readers’ Choice 2017 appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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Delta Vacations Names New President

 

Delta Vacations has named a new president.

The wholly-owned subsidiary of Delta Airlines announced that it had appointed Jennie Ho as its new president, replacing John Caldwell.

Ho had most recently served as Delta’s managing director for specialty and Canada sales, leading a team of more than 70 employees.

Jennie Ho

The company also announced the promotion of Delta Vacations Senior Vice President Tina Iglio to managing director for global sales support for Delta Airlines’ global sales.

Iglio joined Delta Vacations in 2013.

“Jennie and Tina bring to these key roles a wealth of experience, skill and vision as well as a strong commitment to serving customers,” said Bob Somers, Delta’s Senior Vice President – Global Sales. “The moves demonstrate Delta’s commitment to promoting leaders who reflect our diverse customer base, as well as the company’s desire to distribute the best talent across the airline and its subsidiaries.”

Delta Vacations is the official vacation provider of Delta Airlines, offering travel agents vacation packages that bundle flights on Delta and its strategic partners with stays at more than 4,000 hotels, including many in the Caribbean.

The post Delta Vacations Names New President appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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In Guatemala, an Historic Meeting on Regional Internet

 

By GERARD BEST
CJ Contributor

A historic gathering of diverse sectors of Guatemalan society recently took place in the country’s capital, hosted by the Latin American and Caribbean Internet Address Registry, commonly known as LACNIC.

The gathering, called LACNIC On The Move Guatemala, was the first of its kind in the nation. It brought together more than 100 delegates representing the country’s academic, technical, civil and government sectors for high-level talks and expert-led technical training.

Since its establishment in 2002, LACNIC has played a major role in developing an open, stable and secure Internet across Latin America and the Caribbean, relying on a range of initiatives to increase outreach into the 33 diverse nations that form its membership. But this was the Regional Internet Registry’s first such meeting in Guatemala.

Although it has the biggest economy in Central America, Guatemala is burdened with stark inequality, widespread poverty, chronic malnutrition and high maternal-child mortality rates, especially in rural municipalities, where up to eighty per cent are poor. Internet penetration hovers around 25 per cent, and subscriptions remain prohibitively expensive, compounding the digital divide.

Over three days from March 20 to 22, LACNIC On The Move Guatemala provided a rare chance for collaborative networking among members of the Guatemala’s technical community, including network operators, computer engineers, software developers and even members of competing Internet service providers, such as Tigo Guatemala, Telefónica Moviles Guatemala, UFINET and INTERTELCO. Among them were also representatives from Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala, Universidad del Valle de Guatemala and Universidad Galileo.

The uncommon meeting of minds bore extraordinary fruit. Before the end of the second day, several participants expressed their commitment to work together towards the establishment of the country’s first Internet exchange point.

Guillermo Cicileo, Coordinator of Security, Stability and Resilience at LACNIC, said the agreement was “a milestone that will contribute to the development of the Internet in the country.”

An Internet exchange point, or IXP, is a piece of Internet infrastructure through which Internet service providers can exchange local Internet traffic between their networks. A local IXP would improve the quality and cost effectiveness of delivering local web-based services to Guatemalan Internet users, in turn a major benefit for local Internet service providers.

Alfredo Verderosa, Manager of the Services Department at LACNIC, described the meeting as an unprecedented success.

“We came with the objective of generating a meeting space between the different Internet-related actors in the country and at the same time sharing relevant information on technical topics such as Internet Governance, Internet Protocol switchover, Internet exchange points and cybersecurity. We leave with the feeling that this first-time event was very successful on both counts, because we noticed a great interest on the part of the participants to network among themselves and to learn more about the various technical topics covered,” he said.

Significantly, the conference gave multiple global Internet organisations an atypical opportunity to meet face to face with the men and women who build, maintain, regulate and use Guatemala’s Internet infrastructure. LACNIC held the event with the support of the Internet Society and the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN).

“We’ve been doing events like this jointly for some time now, and that’s very much in the spirit of the Internet organisations in the region,” said Rodrigo de la Parra, Vice President for Latin America and the Caribbean at ICANN.

“We are all good neighbours, so we just put that into practice,” he added.

What made the timing of the meeting all the more more special was that it coincided with the formal establishment of the Guatemala Chapter of the Internet Society.

Sebastián Bellagamba, Regional Bureau Director for Latin America and the Caribbean at the Internet Society, encouraged the new local chapter to continue working closely with other relevant organisations for the greater good of the local and regional Internet community.

Collaborative initiatives such as LACNIC On The Move have allowed LACNIC to provide training to more than 15,000 technology professionals throughout Central and South America and the Caribbean.

“We hope to continue working with other organisations in the region to continue to develope a more open, stable and secure Internet in Guatemala,” said Sergio Rojas, Registration Services Specialist at LACNIC.

“We would like to thank the ISOC Chapter of Guatemala and the national telecommunications regulator SIT for organizing this event together with LACNIC. We would also like to thank the Internet Society and the ICANN for working together on these issues that are of benefit to Guatemala and the region,” said César Diaz, Head of Strategic Relations and Telecommunications at LACNIC.

“We are very pleased to have hosted this event here in Guatemala,” countered José Raúl Solares Chíu, Head of SIT. He added, “And we hope that it will not be too long before LACNIC returns.”

The next LACNIC On The Move takes place in Guyana in July.

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