Tech / Technology

Priceline hotel deals, flight deals: Shop the Black Friday sale

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Priceline is celebrating Black Friday with an early access sale. Save on hotels, rental cars, flights, and more.
Priceline website on a mobile device

SAVE ON HOTELS, FLIGHTS, AND MORE: Priceline’s Black Friday sale starts early with savings in over 80 countries.

Our top picks:

Best hotel deal

Priceline’s Black Friday hotel deals

Get up to 30% off select hotel stays at Priceline

woman stretching in the sunlight in a hotel room window


Best rental car deal

Priceline’s Black Friday car rental deals

Get up to 50% off select rental car bookings at Priceline

woman sitting on the back of an suv


Best package deal

Priceline’s Black Friday package deals

Get 20% or more off hotel and flight package deals at Priceline

couple staring off at the pool at a resort


Best cruise deal

Priceline’s Black Friday cruise deals

Get a balcony cabin upgrade at Priceline

woman looking at cruise ship

Dreaming of a vacation? Priceline’s Black Friday sale is here to make it happen. Save big on flights, hotels, rental cars, and vacation packages. Some deals are exclusive to Priceline VIPs, but signing up is free and easy.

How to become a Priceline VIP

Becoming a Priceline VIP is super simple, and it’s free. All you have to do is sign up via the Priceline website or mobile app and create an account.

Priceline VIPs are tiered based on their level of loyalty and the amount they spend at Priceline throughout the year. The more you spend, the higher your VIP status and the better benefits and exclusive deals you’ll have access to.

For example, basic VIP members get up to 10% off rental cars and a 5% Express Deal coupon after completing each trip, whereas VIP Platinum members get up to 20% off rental cars and a 10% Express Deal coupon after each trip. They also get first-priority customer service and early access to exclusive deals and promotions.

Here are our favorite Priceline Black Friday deals that you won’t want to miss:

Best hotel deal


woman stretching in the sunlight in a hotel room window

Credit: Shutterstock / Boyloso


Priceline’s Black Friday hotel deals

Get up to 30% off select hotel stays at Priceline



Why we like it

Looking to save on your next hotel booking? Priceline is offering up to 30% off select hotel stays during its Black Friday sale. But there’s a catch: This deal is only available to Priceline VIP members.

To take advantage of this offer, sign up for a free Priceline VIP membership and then look for the little Black Friday icon to see which hotels are included in the sale.

Just be sure to pay attention to your booking and actual vacation dates. For example, all deals included in this promotion must be booked by Nov. 27 at 11:59 p.m. EST. However, you can stay until May 31, 2024.

Best rental car deal


woman sitting on the back of an suv

Credit: Shutterstock / Tanasan Sungkaew


Priceline’s Black Friday car rental deals

Get up to 50% off select rental car bookings at Priceline



Why we like it

If you’ve already got your hotel and flight booked but are still trying to figure out your transportation, you’ll want to check out these Black Friday rental car deals. During the Black Friday sale, Priceline is offering up to 50% off select rental car bookings.

Just be sure to book by Nov. 19 at 11:59 p.m. EST to snag this deal.

Best package deal


couple staring off at the pool at a resort

Credit: Shutterstock / Song_about_summer


Priceline’s Black Friday package deals

Get 20% or more off hotel and flight package deals at Priceline



Why we like it

Is there anything better than getting a great deal on your hotel and airfare? Priceline’s Black Friday sale also features discounted package deals that include hotel stays and airfare.

Book by Nov. 27 at 11:59 p.m. EST and stay by April 30, 2024, to save 20% or more on all-inclusive resorts and flights when you book through Priceline. Note: You’ve gotta book your hotel and flight together to get this deal.

Best cruise deal


woman looking at cruise ship

Credit: Shutterstock / Zigres


Priceline’s Black Friday cruise deals

Get a balcony cabin upgrade at Priceline



Why we like it

If traveling by boat is more your style, Priceline’s Black Friday sale has some great cruise deals, too. Snag a balcony cabin upgrade for the price of an oceanview stateroom, plus more perks if you book by Nov. 13 at 9 a.m. EST.

Can’t you just hear the sound of the ocean and feel the breeze already?

Even more deals you should definitely know about

In addition to offering discounts on hotel stays, rental cars, packages, and cruises, Priceline is giving out Mystery Coupons.

Here’s how it works: Sign up to be a Priceline email subscriber by November 21, 2023, to receive a mystery coupon code for the Black Friday sale. Of the subscribers, 4,000 will receive 99% off, 6,000 will receive 50% off, and 10,000 will receive 25% off. Everyone else will receive 10% off.

Priceline is also offering VIP treatment this Black Friday. Book a flight, hotel, or package deal to earn a VIP Gold status upgrade through March 31, 2024. Existing VIP Gold or Platinum members can save $20 on any hotel deal with the code VIPBF.

If you’re looking for a new travel rewards credit card, Priceline will give you a $100 statement credit and 5,000 bonus points when you apply for and are approved for a Priceline VIP Rewards Visa Card by Nov. 27.

Here’s the TL;DR version:

  • Save 30% or more on select hotels (11/6 – 11/27)

  • Save as much as 50% on Rental Car Express Deals (11/6 – 11/19)

  • Get instantly upgraded to VIP Gold Status (11/13 – 11/20)

  • Save 20% or more on top all-inclusive destinations when you bundle hotel and flight (11/6 – 11/27)

  • Earn a $100 statement credit and 5K bonus points when you sign up for a Priceline VIP Rewards Visa Card (11/6 –11/27)

Bonus deals:

  • Get two months free (including family!) when you sign up for CLEAR (11/6 – 11/27)

  • Save 25% or more on airport parking with The Parking Spot (11/6 – 11/30)

Tech / Technology

Could humans have babies in space safely? Here’s what we know.

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Some scientists seek to solve the potential problems caused by microgravity and cosmic radiation for human reproduction in space.
Baby floating in spaceship

The recently married couple tip their bellhop, drop their suitcases, and breathe out a sigh as they fall back on the bed. They wanted a gramworthy honeymoon, and for a few million dollars, they’ve got it.

Once their initial travel sickness wears off, they’re feeling as frisky as any other newlyweds. Perhaps the only thing that could distract them from the marital act now is that incredible cabin view of infinite space, and the faint reminders of civilization glinting at them from Earth, some 250 miles below.

If space hotels come to fruition in the coming years or more realistically decades, cosmic vacations won’t be a sci-fi fantasy. Even without hotels, longer orbital space flights all but guarantee tourists opportunities to join the 60-miles-high club. It’s the “souvenirs” these couples could bring home that have a few researchers worried — enough to publish a public report on the risks associated with human conception in the future space tourism sector.

Bottomline: No one knows whether babies could be conceived in space without detrimental consequences to their health — there simply isn’t enough research. While professional astronauts likely have a good grasp on why they shouldn’t set out to make a starchild, less-informed travelers might not demonstrate the same level of restraint.

“It’s going to be a very strong magnet for these couples. They’ll want to be maybe in the history books, like, ‘Hey, we created the very first naturally conceived baby in space,'” said Egbert Edelbroek, CEO of the space research company SpaceBorn United and one of the co-authors, “but they shouldn’t want to.”

The paper published in April captured some buzz — even some snickers from late-night host Jimmy Kimmel, who called them “nine very lonely authors” — for broaching a little-discussed issue. Though the intent was to get the burgeoning space tourism sector to think about how to discourage space sex that leads to pregnancy (Not sex altogether, one of the researchers assured Mashable. They’re not prudes.), the topic brings into focus an existential problem: How could humans ever leave Earth in the event of a global crisis if people don’t know how to procreate in space or any other world?

SpaceX founder Elon Musk has said his ultimate vision is to use a fleet of Starships to send 1 million humans to Mars by 2050. But if those pioneers die off because they can’t have children, or healthy children, what’s the point?


“They’ll want to be maybe in the history books, like, ‘Hey, we created the very first naturally conceived baby in space,’ but they shouldn’t want to.”

a family colonizing Mars

Will the first long-duration space journeys involving astronauts and their descendants have to be planned as one-way trips?
Credit: Steven Hobbs / Stocktrek Images via Getty Images illustration

Gravity and radiation levels pose challenges

In spaceflight, humans are exposed to different levels of gravity — sometimes less, sometimes more. Think about those roller coaster warnings at amusement parks prohibiting pregnant people from riding. They’re in part because extra G-forces can lead to premature separation of the placenta from the wall of the uterus.

On the other hand, little or no gravity like on the International Space Station presents its own challenges: For the past 60 years, NASA has been working on how to keep adults healthy in weightlessness. As it is, astronauts are expected to exercise at least two hours a day on a treadmill or stationary bicycle to combat bone and muscle deterioration.

Research also suggests that cosmic radiation, like other sources of radiation, could damage DNA, reproductive organs, and sperm and egg cells. In women, depending on the amount of exposure, that might mean sterility, ovarian failure, and cancer, which may lead to early menopause or death. In pregnancy, the risks could include miscarriage and premature births. For men, too much radiation could also lead to reduced sperm count or sterility, though some scientific findings indicate sperm could be safely stored in space for a time.

When it comes to embryos and fetuses, the news is just as grim. Radiation can cause growth delays, cognitive impairments, deformities, and higher risks of newborn death.

“We’ve got some ideas that there will be quite a lot of negative issues in the development of bones and musculature,” said David Cullen, professor of astrobiology and space biotechnology at Cranfield University in the United Kingdom. “And all these other kinds of things inherently are driven by a combination of genetics, biochemistry, and responses to the local environment. So if you change that local environment, you expect all of those development states to be affected in some way — and, most likely, in a negative way.”

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Startup seeks to make reproduction in space work

The Dutch entrepreneur Edelbroek wants to make human reproduction possible in space by first taking sex out of the equation. His company, SpaceBorn United, may be the first in the world planning space-based research on in vitro fertilization, though it’s hard to know what the often-secretive Chinese government may be doing.

Through a series of missions, the startup wants to conduct experiments observing the effects of partial gravity on embryo development. The company, which has about 30 mostly part-time employees now, would start with animal studies before advancing to human cells. In August, SpaceBorn United partnered with Independence-X, a Malaysian space exploration company, to conduct a suborbital drop test of its re-entry capsule containing biological samples.

So far SpaceBorn United has developed a miniature IVF and embryo incubator using microfluidics technology. The prototype hardware, which looks like a CD, has multiple tiny channels that hold sperm and eggs. The disc spins to simulate different loads of gravity while the device automatically impregnates embryos. Now the venture is working with a German company, Atmos Space Cargo, to launch mouse embryos on an orbital test flight by the end of next year, Edelbroek said.

A SpaceBorn United capsule orbiting Earth

SpaceBorn United has developed a miniaturized IVF and embryo incubator using microfluidic technology.
Credit: SpaceBorn United illustration

The logistics of doing these experiments are complicated. Because the team needs to work with freshly harvested female cells, the company must have last-minute access to the rocket payload, making ride-sharing programs unfeasible. The cells only remain fertile for four to six hours.

But private industry will have to lead the way on space reproduction research, he said, because NASA and other government space agencies have onerous political challenges to navigate before engaging in such studies. In the United States, for instance, sex is already a taboo subject. Add on top of that the nation’s complex culture war over reproductive rights, and the hurdles are monumental. Experts say the U.S. space agency isn’t likely to get Congress on board with funding such endeavors.

They “can only work with baby steps — with fruit flies and frog eggs and some rodents — and never, never even speak about doing it with human reproductive cells,” he said.

Astronauts conducting frog experiment in space

While the experiment was largely deemed a reproduction success story in the mass media, tadpoles raised in microgravity were documented as having enlarged heads and eyes in scientific journals.
Credit: Tom Trower / NASA Ames Research Center

Most of the company’s investors are in the fertility sector because of the potential to improve assisted reproductive technology on Earth. They’ve also received interest in collaborating from neophyte spacefaring nations, such as the United Arab Emirates, that may want the prestige of being involved in a first like human embryo conception in space.

In the same vein as the space burial market, SpaceBorn United anticipates there will be affluent customers interested in paying for space-fertilized babies long before humans are even living somewhere beyond Earth.

“We’ve had other suggestions, like space cats and dogs,” Edelbroek said.

SpaceBorn United developing prototype IVF hardware

The prototype hardware, which looks like a CD, has multiple mini channels that hold semen and eggs.
Credit: SpaceBorn United

Ethics of human reproduction research in space

Though the ultimate goal may be to one day make natural conception and childbirth possible in space, doing so won’t be possible anytime soon, said Alexandra Proshchina, a neuroscientist at the Petrovsky National Research Center for Surgery in Moscow.

She and her colleagues have worked on animal reproduction studies in microgravity through several missions organized by the Institute of Biomedical Problems. In the 1990s, they participated in a Russian-Canadian experiment on the BION-10 biosatellite involving clawed frog tadpoles and an 11-day Russian-American experiment on space shuttle Atlantis centered on the development of rat embryos.


“(They) can only work with baby steps — with fruit flies and frog eggs and some rodents — and never, never even speak about doing it with human reproductive cells.”

Then in 2014, along with Rustam Berdiev, a physiologist at the Lomonosov Moscow State University, they performed the world’s first attempt to mate ornate day geckos in spaceflight on the Russian FOTON-M4 satellite, though the lizards died due to difficulties with the mission. The team has since started preparing an orbital experiment involving veiled chameleon embryos, but the project has stalled, in part because of funding challenges, researchers told Mashable.

human embryo gestating

Likely private industry will have to lead the way on space reproduction research because NASA and other government space agencies have political challenges to navigate before engaging in such studies.
Credit: DEA / L. RICCIARINI / De Agostini via Getty Images

During pregnancy, women adapt to changes in body mass, hormone levels, metabolism, and a host of other biological processes that put significant strain on their bodies. Even astronauts at peak fitness get spacesick, said Proshchina, who, along with morphologist Victoria Gulimova, responded to Mashable in writing to overcome translation issues.

“Subjecting pregnant women to such physical stress is not very humane,” Proshchina said. “Moreover, it would be unacceptable to put the baby at risk.”

Even if a baby could be delivered safely in space, scientists know even less about the impacts of the space environment on children and teenagers, said Alex Layendecker, a former Air Force space operations officer with a doctorate in human sexuality. He has recently founded the Astrosexological Research Institute, a nonprofit organization aimed at facilitating studies of sex and reproduction in space.

Cell division is more rapid in children than adults. When ionizing radiation penetrates a human body, it destroys bonds and can lead to cancer. If a child were to develop cancer, it might spread faster in outer space conditions than it would for an adult, he said.

Child existing in space

Even if a baby could be delivered in space, scientists know even less about the impacts of the space environment on children and teenagers.
Credit: A. Martin UW Photography via Getty Images

In terms of ethics, taking a minor away from the planet, even just for a space cruise, would cross a line, given the lack of data: Children can’t provide informed consent, yet their lives likely would be at a much higher risk of negative impacts, he said.

Whether a human conceived and born in space would be able to adapt to other planets is a looming unknown. It’s not even clear whether such a child could survive on Earth after coming home, said Gulimova, who also works at the Petrovsky National Research Center for Surgery.

Or, would the first long-duration space journeys crewed with astronauts and their descendants have to be planned as one-way trips?

“There are many questions, and many more ground-based and orbital experiments that will have to be carried out, before happy parents on board the spacecraft hear the first cry of the first citizen of the Universe,” she said. 

Tech / Technology

Best travel deals Nov. 2023: Cruise fares and Universal tickets

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This week, book cheap trips to Europe through Priceline and score cruise fares up to 50% off.
Blue Samsonite hardside suitcase with flower pot in background

UPDATE: Nov. 3, 2023, 5:00 a.m. EDT This post is updated weekly with the latest travel deals on flights, cruises, theme parks, and more.

Best travel deals this week:

Best flight deal

GoWild! All You Can Fly fall and winter pass

Unlimited flights between Sept. 2 and Feb. 29 2024 for a one-time purchase of $299

Frontier Airlines logo on white background


Best cruise deal

Celebrity Cruises

40% off all cruises

Navy blue Celebrity Cruises logo on white background


Best hotel deal

Kimpton Hotels and Restaurants

Up to 20% off three or more nights when booked by Dec. 31

Kimpton Hotels and Restaurants logo on white background


Best luggage deal

American Tourister

30% off select styles

American Tourister logo on white background


Best experience deal

Universal Orlando

Two days free with a two-park, three-day ticket

Blue Universal Orlando logo on white background

We all follow those people on Instagram who are somehow always on vacation. We don’t know their life story, but we’d be willing to bet they didn’t pay full price for that excursion — they just planned strategically. We’re keeping track of the best flight, train, luggage, and hotel deals below to help you do the same. Now get outta here.

Flights

Why we like it

The cold weather version of Frontier’s internet-breaking summer pass unlocks unlimited flights to both domestic and international Frontier destinations between Sept. 2 and Feb. 29, 2024, for a one-time fee of $299. Frontier serves more than 100 airports across the U.S., Mexico, the Caribbean, and Latin America, with new locations frequently being added to the lineup. This is cheaper than even the summer pass’ debut price of $399 and its long-term sale price of $499.

Frontier also dropped a monthly pass that’s free for the first month (aside from a $49 enrollment fee) and renews for $149 monthly after that. Your unlimited monthly pass begins the day you purchase it and runs for 30 days each period. Be sure to read the fine print before snagging any of the tickets.

More flight deals

  • PLAY — $99 flights from BWI, BOS, SWF, and IAD to Iceland, Paris, Copenhagen, London, Dublin, Berlin, Athens, Frankfurt, and Amsterdam when booked by Nov. 3

  • Southwest — one-way fares as low as $89 including Thanksgiving

Trains, cruises, and rental cars


Navy blue Celebrity Cruises logo on white background

Credit: Celebrity Cruises

Why we like it

If you need a sign to book that cruise you’ve been talking about taking since last year, Celebrity Cruise Line’s current offering of 40% off all guests on all trips is that sign. The Bahamas, Grand Cayman, Saint Kitts, Italy, Greece, France, Spain, and more Caribbean and European destinations are all options, and depending on the itinerary, you can sail for as long as 13 nights or take a quick three-night getaway.

More train, cruise, and rental car deals

  • American Airlines — save up to 35% on rental car base rates

  • Amtrak — save up to 60% on eight tickets to various destinations, up to 50% on Northeast trips, up to 15% on California and Virginia trips, and more

  • Norwegian Cruise Line — save 70% on a second guest’s fare plus a free unlimited open bar, $50 off-shore excursions, and more

  • Priceline — save 30% or more when you bundle a flight with a Hilton hotel

  • Princess Cruises — save up to 50% on fares and deposits

Theme park deals


Blue Universal Orlando logo on white background

Credit: Universal Studios


Our pick: Universal Orlando

Two days free with a two-park, three-day ticket



Why we like it

Vacation doesn’t feel like vacation when you’re trying to cram a theme park’s full glory into a few short days. You can add three full days at Universal to your trip for free when you purchase tickets for two days (as long as they’re all consecutive). That’s five days for the price of two, so you can really take your time between Universal and Islands of Adventure — or even devote a whole day to the Wizarding World of Harry Potter. You’d still have to buy separate tickets (starting at $84.99) to Halloween Horror Nights, but the money you’re saving with this deal basically secures those for free.

More experience deals

  • Busch Gardens — save 35% on single day tickets or $70 on two park tickets plus Tampa or save up to 60% on tickets at Williamsburg

  • Hersheypark — save up to 35% on Hersheypark Christmas Candylane presale tickets or up to 50% on fall weekend tickets

Hotels


Our pick: Kimpton Hotels and Restaurants

Up to 20% off three or more nights when booked by Dec. 31



Why we like it

Quick weekend excursions are society’s sanity staples — but sometimes, you deserve more. If you didn’t get to take that long trip this summer, Kimpton’s extended “Stay Longer and Save” promo is your nudge to get away before 2024. Through Dec. 31, you can save between 15% and 20% on stays three nights or longer at a ton of stylish participating Kimpton locations across the U.S.

If a one or two-night trip is in the cards, however, you can also save up to 20% off the best flexible rate when you book at least seven days in advance.

More hotel deals

  • B Hotels and Resorts Orlando — save up to 25% on stays of two or more nights when booked by Dec. 20

  • Casa de Sierra Nevada — stay three nights and get a fourth night free through Dec. 15

  • The Grove Resort & Waterpark Orlando — 20% off stays through Sept. 3, 2024 when booked by Nov. 19, 2023

  • Hamilton Princess and Beach Club Bermuda — save 15% on two nights, 20% off three or four nights, or 25% on five or more nights when you book by March 24, 2024, and stay before April 30, 2024

  • Hampton Inn — save up to 17% on the Best Available Rate when you book at least seven days in advance

  • JetBlue — save up to 20% on hotels if you have a JetBlue flight

  • Marriott — save up to 20% on hotel and flight bundles to select destinations

  • Priceline — save up to 15% on European destinations when you book through the app with code EUROESCAPE, plus save up to 40% on hotel and flight bundles for Europe vacations

  • Red Roof Inn — save an extra 15% on your stay with Redi Rewards

  • Sonesta — save up to 30% when you book two or more nights with code SAVEMORE

  • Walt Disney World — save up to 25% on stays most Sunday to Thursday nights from Jan. 9 through Feb. 22, 2024 when you book by Dec. 15, 2023

Luggage


American Tourister logo on white background

Credit: American Tourister

Why we like it

Still putting up with your suitcase’s busted wheel? Longstanding luggage icon American Tourister’s extended site-wide Labor Day sale is your excuse to finally replace it. Save up to 30% on hardside and softside spinners, carry-ons, garment bags, and more.

More luggage deals

  • Bagail — save up to 40% on packing cubes in select colors

  • Béis — save 10% on a luggage set of two or 15% on a luggage set of three

  • Calpak — save up to 60% on select best sellers

  • Delsey — 40% off select pieces from the Paris collection

  • Herschel — save up to 30% on Forever Classics

  • Kohl’s — save up to 50% on suitcases from Kenneth Cole Reaction, London Fog, Rockland, and more

  • Macy’s — save up to 60% on Bric’s Milano, DKNY, Jansport, and more

  • Mark & Graham — save up to 50% on select personalized totes, handbags, travel pouches, and more

  • Paravel — save 20% on a set of two Aviator suitcases or 30% on a set of three

  • Samsonite — save 30% on select styles

  • TravelPro — save up to 20% sitewide

  • Tumi — save up to 20% on select styles

  • Walmart — save up to 50% on hardside luggage sets from Sunbee and Travelhouse