islands
Wandering around the island of Fanø in Denmark, tourists will come across sculptures and cartoon images of a bespectacled seal. This is Waddi, the world’s first AI tour guide. Beside the pictures of this friendly seal avatar are a series of QR codes. Visitors can scan the code and begin chatting with Waddi. Tourists can ask him all kinds of questions from where to hire bicycles to the best nature experiences and top restaurants. Denmark gets the world’s first AI tour guideAccording to the developers behind the technology, Waddi is the first of its kind in the world. This virtual tour guide use...
Euronews (English)
Destinations across Europe are battling overtourism - visit Venice and you’ll have to pay an entry fee, book for Amsterdam and you’ll be asked to take a quiz about your holiday activities, head to the Canary Islands and you might see graffiti telling tourists to go home. It’s no surprise then that many travellers are seeking out lesser-trod alternatives away from the crowds. You might not get to see iconic landmarks or eat in raved-about restaurants, but you’ll find space, peace, lower prices and a few surprises. Here are the best places for escaping the crowds, according to users of Reddit’s ...
Euronews (English)
St Helena, a small, craggy island in the South Atlantic Ocean, has never seen many tourists. It’s for a good reason though - it's one of the most remote inhabited places in the world. Up until 2017, it took five nights by boat to reach the British overseas territory, located halfway between southern Africa and Brazil. That’s changed recently, with weekly commercial flights and the recent arrival of high-speed internet. Local authorities are now hoping to breathe new life into a fledgling tourism industry. In 2023, the island welcomed about 2,100 leisure travellers - and the aim is to attract e...
Euronews (English)
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