Breaking news

Wizz Air Reopens Fixed Price Flight Subscription In Cyprus

Overview Of The New Subscription Model

Low-cost airline Wizz Air has reintroduced its fixed-price flight subscription, Wizz MultiPass, for passengers in Cyprus. The program allows travellers to secure fixed flight prices on international routes to and from Cyprus for one year, regardless of seasonal demand or short-term fare fluctuations.

Subscription Details And Benefits

The subscription targets passengers who travel regularly and plan trips in advance. Members receive one confirmed one-way or return flight each month, provided bookings are made at least five days before departure. Optional services can be added depending on travel preferences. These include Wizz Priority, which provides priority boarding and two cabin bags, plus a 20-kilogram checked bag.

Flexible Booking And Pricing Structure

Subscribers can book their first flight immediately after activating the plan, with travel possible from five days later. The subscription renews automatically on the first day of each month. Passengers who sign up mid-month can still start using the service if at least five days remain in the month. In such cases, the first payment is charged immediately, and the subscription resets on the first day of the following month.

Detailed Fare Breakdown

For one-way travel, the first-month fee is €156, followed by a recurring monthly charge of €57 for the remaining 11 months. Passengers choosing return flights pay an initial fee of €312, with a monthly charge of €114 thereafter. Additional services are available at an extra cost. Wizz Priority costs €33 for one-way flights and €66 for return trips, while a 20-kilogram checked bag costs €42 one way or €84 for return travel.

Strategic Differentiation And Customer Impact

The subscription is designed for passengers in Cyprus who travel frequently on fixed routes and prefer predictable travel costs. Wizz MultiPass differs from the airline’s “Wizz All You Can Fly” program, which allows multiple flights across the airline’s network but requires a £8.64 booking fee per flight and limits bookings to the final 72 hours to three hours before departure, depending on seat availability.

Expert Commentary And Market Trends

Silvia Mosquera Gonzalez, Chief Commercial Officer at Wizz Air, noted that travellers increasingly seek price stability when planning trips, particularly during peak travel periods. She stated that the Wizz MultiPass subscription allows passengers in Cyprus to secure fixed travel costs for an entire year, whether they travel frequently for work or plan several leisure trips. The program reflects broader efforts by airlines to introduce subscription-style products that provide predictable pricing in a market characterized by fluctuating fares.

Google Loses More AI Talent As Anthropic Expands Research Team

Google’s efforts to strengthen its position in artificial intelligence are facing another talent challenge, with Bloomberg reporting that researchers Jonas Adler and Alexander Pritzel are preparing to leave the company for Anthropic.

Key Contributors To Gemini Move On

Both researchers reportedly played important roles in the development of Gemini, Google’s flagship AI model. Their departures come as the company continues to invest heavily in advancing its AI capabilities and competing with other leading developers in the sector.

A Broader Pattern Of Departures

The reported moves follow a series of high-profile departures from Google’s AI teams in recent weeks.

Last week, researcher Noam Shazeer announced that he was leaving Google for OpenAI. Shazeer spent most of his career at Google after joining the company in 2000, apart from three years at Character.AI, the startup Google effectively acquired through a $2.7 billion deal that brought him back to work on Gemini.

Shortly afterwards, Google DeepMind director John Jumper also announced his departure for Anthropic. Jumper shared the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with DeepMind chief executive Demis Hassabis for their work on AlphaFold, the AI system designed to predict three-dimensional protein structures.

Why Anthropic And OpenAI Are Attracting Talent

The departures highlight the increasingly competitive market for top AI researchers as leading companies continue to expand their capabilities and recruit aggressively.

With both OpenAI and Anthropic frequently viewed as central players in the next phase of AI development, opportunities to work on frontier models and participate in fast-growing organisations have become an important draw for senior researchers.

The Challenge For Google

For Google, the issue extends beyond replacing individual researchers. Maintaining continuity across teams, preserving institutional knowledge and sustaining momentum in key AI projects are becoming increasingly important as competition for talent intensifies.

As the race to develop advanced AI systems accelerates, retaining experienced researchers is likely to remain a key focus for all major players in the sector.

Uol
The Future Forbes Realty Global Properties
Aretilaw firm
eCredo

Become a Speaker

Become a Speaker

Become a Partner

Subscribe for our weekly newsletter