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Ivanka Trump tweet triples downloads of Russian fear of flying app | Ivanka Trump tweet triples downloads of Russian fear of flying app |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Downloads of SkyGuru, a Russian-made application for people who fear flying, increased by 220 percent following a tweet posted by the US President’s daughter Ivanka Trump. | Downloads of SkyGuru, a Russian-made application for people who fear flying, increased by 220 percent following a tweet posted by the US President’s daughter Ivanka Trump. |
SkyGuru’s website traffic rose by 11,000 percent shortly after Ivanka mentioned the app, according to developer Aleksey Gervash, as quoted by Russian media source Life. | |
“We do not know whether Trump suffers from fear of flying. However, we definitely know that Ivanka would suggest he use SkyGuru on board Air Force One,” Gervash said in a Facebook post. | “We do not know whether Trump suffers from fear of flying. However, we definitely know that Ivanka would suggest he use SkyGuru on board Air Force One,” Gervash said in a Facebook post. |
SkyGuru is designed to help passengers who have aerophobia get over the anxiety that comes with flying. The app provides nervous travelers with real-time explanations of what and why certain things occur and what to expect during a flight. | SkyGuru is designed to help passengers who have aerophobia get over the anxiety that comes with flying. The app provides nervous travelers with real-time explanations of what and why certain things occur and what to expect during a flight. |
Aviation data and the phone’s built-in sensors give those afraid of flying the feeling they are sitting next to the pilot, according to the developer’s website. | Aviation data and the phone’s built-in sensors give those afraid of flying the feeling they are sitting next to the pilot, according to the developer’s website. |
The app, which works when the phone is in airplane mode, sends the users reassuring messages like “control yourself rather than the airplane,” just when high-stress moments like landing, takeoff or encounters with turbulence are about to happen. | The app, which works when the phone is in airplane mode, sends the users reassuring messages like “control yourself rather than the airplane,” just when high-stress moments like landing, takeoff or encounters with turbulence are about to happen. |
SkyGuru works on the ground as well. It can give passengers advice on which seat to pick on the plane, inform of possible delays or explain necessary cabin procedures. | SkyGuru works on the ground as well. It can give passengers advice on which seat to pick on the plane, inform of possible delays or explain necessary cabin procedures. |
The application was released last September and costs smartphones users around $20. | The application was released last September and costs smartphones users around $20. |
READ MORE: JetBlue removes passengers for 'harassing' Ivanka Trump | READ MORE: JetBlue removes passengers for 'harassing' Ivanka Trump |
The app creator Aleksey Gervash is a Russian commercial pilot and psychologist, who is also the head of a Moscow-based center for studying aerophobia “Flying without Fear.” |
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