The many ways travel changed – resoundingly for the better – in 2018

It was mostly cheers and no jeers: we got nicer planes and premium economy cabins, some airlines introduced six-figure parties at 45,000 feet, and hotels took on Airbnb
If you’re heading out of town this week, the airport may not look too different from the one you walked through in January. The same sitcoms are showing on your seat-back screen – assuming you still have one. And hopefully the people you’re travelling to visit are familiar faces, too.
But there’s a lot about travel that has changed over the past 12 months – even if you were too fixated on your destination to notice.
Here are the major highlights.
Flights went farther

Qantas Airways Ltd debuted its newest ultra-long-haul this spring: a flight from Perth to London. At 17 hours, it came close to breaking records.
Then in October, Singapore Airlines did what Qantas didn’t. Its 18-hour, 45-minute route – which spans 10,400 miles from Changi to Newark – is 500 miles longer than the previous record-holder, a Qatar Airways flight from Auckland to Doha.
Credit goes to Airbus’s new A350-900 Ultra Long Range aircraft, which guzzles less fuel than previous versions and makes the journey possible. (According to our reviewer, the journey feels every bit as long as it is, even if there are only business-class seats aboard.)
And flights are only going to continue getting longer.