Trip Planning
Perillo Tours Launches Two New Italy Itineraries for 2026

Perillo Tours has added two new tours to its Italy portfolio for next year, offering longer stays in Florence and Sorrento.
“This style of itinerary is something we’ve found our guests really value,” said Steve Perillo, third-generation owner of Perillo Tours. “By anchoring the itinerary in just two Italian cities, our guests can settle in and explore each destination, and its surrounding region, in more depth.”
Gems of Italy
The new Gems of Italy tour is a nine-day trip exploring Northern Italy, with three nights in Genoa visiting Portofino, Piemonte and Cinque Terre before a four-night stay in Florence, with visits to Venice and Val d’Orcia. The trip includes experiences like truffle hunting, wine tasting, a scenic yacht cruise and more.
The tour runs from April through October, 2026 and starts at $3,695 per person.
La Dolce Vita
The second new tour is La Dolce Vita, a nine-day trip that begins with three nights in Rome before heading to Sorrento for four nights. Travelers will enjoy visiting the Colosseum, Sistine Chapel, St. Peter’s Basilica and a trip to Pompeii from Rome, before exploring Capri, Positano and other delights along the Amalfi Coast.
The trip runs from April through October 2026 and starts at $4,395 per person.
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Trip Planning
Emburse Now Introduces New Integrated Itinerary Management To Simplify Business Travel and Expense Management

Tuesday, July 22, 2025
Expense management company Emburse wants to make travel and expense read No more fiddling with spreadsheets and uploading receipts: Emburse launches integration with TripLink management easier for business travelers, which is why the business expense service provider has added itinerary management to its Emburse Enterprise app. From August 1, 2025, business customers will be able to holistically manage trips and expenditure on one platform. This new capability is meant to help streamline business travel and eliminate the complications of managing itineraries, receipts and expenses across multiple systems.
The addition of this new functionality is in service to Emburse’s broader vision to deliver an integrated travel and expense workflow. The idea is to provide users with a way to manage business travel smarter and easier, while keeping a better grip on spend and are able to make better decisions, increase policy compliance and reduce the amount of time it takes to get the numbers to aggregate the financial reports. It’s expected to lead to major gains in efficiency and usability for both corporate travelers and finance departments.
Streamlined Experience for Business Travelers
Starting August 1, the Emburse Enterprise app will allow users to track their entire travel journey within the app, from flight and hotel bookings to ground transportation. Travelers will be able to view key details such as check-in times, flight bookings, and airport transfer details all in one place. This eliminates the need to toggle between different platforms or apps to track these details, saving time and reducing confusion.
A key feature of this integration is the ability to automatically align expenses with travel itineraries. This means that users will receive notifications about policy-compliant expenses directly linked to their trip information. The app’s automatic categorization of travel-related expenses ensures that users can easily manage both their travel and finances without the stress of manual data entry.
With this integration, Emburse Enterprise enables users to get real-time updates about their itinerary, including flight delays, cancellations, or changes in travel details. Having this information within the app ensures that business travelers can stay informed, even when their plans change unexpectedly.
Benefits for Finance Teams and Organizations
While the new feature is designed to enhance the experience of business travelers, the integration of travel and expense data will also benefit finance teams by providing them with greater visibility and control over spending. With real-time access to expense data and itinerary details, finance professionals will be able to track expenses more efficiently and ensure that travel policies are being followed in real time.
The ability to access both itinerary information and expense reports in one place makes it easier for finance departments to spot potential issues like expense inaccuracies or spending leakage. Emburse’s unified system enables companies to predict and manage spend proactively, ensuring compliance and reducing the chances of overspending on business travel.
The move to integrate these two key elements into one system aligns with Emburse’s broader strategy of offering businesses smarter tools that make the financial management process more actionable and intelligent. By combining itinerary management with expense tracking, Emburse has positioned itself to help organizations streamline their business travel workflow while ensuring financial integrity.
A Powerful Combination: AI-Powered Features and Receipt Management
The Emburse Enterprise app also does well in utilizing AI-powered technology that assists with the automatic receipt capture and expense-categorization process. This cuts down on the manual effort required from users who can turn in their expenses without concern for dealing with paper receipts or hand-entering information. With AI processing in the background, the app is able to scan, extract information from receipts and include them directly into your travel itinerary.
Additionally, it helps companies enforce travel policies and manage expenses effectively while making it convenient for employees to report expenses and finance teams to see and approve them. AI that has been incorporated into the technology ensures a seamless and user-friendly approach for what has in the past been a painful process (managing the different elements of business travel and expenses).
Future Enhancements to the Emburse Platform
The integration of itinerary management is only one of the many upcoming features in Emburse’s Expense Intelligence roadmap. Alongside itinerary management, Emburse plans to launch additional tools to further simplify the travel and expense management process. These include Emburse Book, which will allow users to book travel directly through the platform, and Emburse Reshop, designed to help users rebook or adjust travel plans as needed.
These upcoming tools, along with the itinerary management feature, show Emburse’s commitment to providing a comprehensive, end-to-end solution for business travel and expenses. As the platform continues to evolve, Emburse is focused on enhancing the travel and expense workflow, making it more intuitive and easier for businesses and their employees to manage their finances.
Conclusion: A New Era for Business Travel and Expense Management
We believe that embedding itinerary management directly in the Emburse Enterprise app represents a significant step in streamlining the sometimes convoluted – and disjointed – business travel experience. With the consolidation of travel details and spend data in an intelligent workflow, Emburse is streamlining processes for both the traveling employee and finance department -via an innovative and simplified approach to automation. This groundbreaking initiative will allow businesses to easily control their travel program, maintain policy compliance, and achieve greater financial visibility overall.
Today’s launch continues to establish Emburse as a go-to leader in expense management with this functionality now available on August 1, 2025. The organization is committed to smart, AI-driven solutions designed to enrich the user experience and improve business efficiency. As the future of business travel revolutionizes how people work remotely, smarter and safer, Emburse will continue to be at the forefront of this evolution, providing companies with new ways to manage travel and expenses more efficiently than ever before.
Trip Planning
Tonight | Travel Guides on Channel 9 and 9Now S8E10

Travel Guides on Channel 9 and 9Now S8E10 – Our Guides enjoy a motorhome road trip through rural NSW. From the rugged beauty of the Blue Mountains, to racing cars around Bathurst’s Mount Panorama, and donning a jumpsuit for the Elvis Festival in Parkes, this trip will have them all shook up.
Country NSW
Travel Guides on Channel 9 and 9Now – Sunday 20 July at 7:00pm
TV Central Nine content HERE
Travel Guides on Channel 9 and 9Now S8E10
Trip Planning
This self-hosted travel app has completely changed how I travel

Dhruv Bhutani / Android Authority
Travel has always been a huge part of my life. Whether I’m planning a weekend getaway for a hike or a longer multi-country backpacking trip, I’ve relied on travel apps to help keep things organized. But after years of using some of the best travel apps like Wanderlog, TripIt, making notes in Google Keep or Notion, or even maintaining a pen and paper journal, I realized they all came with frustrating trade-offs. Too many ads, pushy upgrade prompts, opaque subscription models, lack of features, and most worryingly, an always-on stream of data collection and tracking. For something as personal as travel, that’s something I really don’t want.
So earlier this year, I started looking for alternatives. I wanted something lightweight, customizable, and private. If it was self-hostable and open source, even better. Turns out, there really is an open-source project for every need. That search led me to AdventureLog, a self-hosted, open source travel tracker and itinerary manager that’s as functional as it is privacy-respecting. I installed it on my Synology NAS with Docker, and it has completely changed how I travel and plan trips. Here’s how.
Planning without the noise
Dhruv Bhutani / Android Authority
The first time I really put AdventureLog through its paces was on a weeklong trip to Prague. It’s a city I’ve always wanted to revisit, not just pass through. So, with one of my favorite bands performing in the city, it made sense to plan a vacation around it. I wasn’t interested in joining pre-planned walking tours or sticking to an optimized route of “top 10 things to see.” I wanted to keep a free-flowing itinerary with some sights I wanted to see, open-ended enough to go with the flow, while keeping track of the smaller discoveries for a future trip.
Before leaving, I created a new trip in AdventureLog. I added a rough outline of the week, including basics like arrival times, my Airbnb location, and a few scattered bookmarks of places I’d read about. A tucked-away cafe near Letna Park, a record store in Vinohrady, and a speakeasy bar in the Old Town that only locals seemed to talk about online. What was different this time wasn’t just how I planned the trip, but how the tool I was using actually stayed out of the way. There was no clutter, no offers, no pop-ups, no ad-driven suggestions for other things I might want to do. Just a timeline and a clean map interface.
AdventureLog behaves more like a super-charged travel journal than yet another travel app.
All that might sound like a standard travel planning app, but AdventureLog gets a bit more interesting. It also functions as a travel diary. Each day, I logged entries as they happened. Cinnamon buns for breakfast, a random, unplanned visit to the Klementinum library that felt like stepping into a movie set. Or a long walk by the river. The act of logging things in the moment felt like capturing the flavor of the day, the kind of thing that would usually go in my diary and that I’d never preserve in Notion or a basic checklist. By turning the travel app into a travel journal, AdventureLog has become a tool I use a couple of times a week, versus only when I’m planning a trip.
When used to its full potential, AdventureLog can create a personal archive of your trip, complete with notes, places, and impressions. Something few other travel apps can achieve.
Organize, reflect, revisit — All in one place
Dhruv Bhutani / Android Authority
AdventureLog is deceptively simple, but the more I used it, the more I appreciated the depth it offers under the hood. Built with modern tools, it runs fast and reliably even on minimal hardware. The interface is responsive enough to feel like a native app, whether I’m on a laptop or checking it from my phone during a layover.
Dhruv Bhutani / Android Authority
Each trip becomes its own timeline. You can add a name and cover image, then start building out daily logs. The text fields support Markdown, which I found surprisingly useful for structuring my notes. I’m used to Markdown from my notes apps, so it just made text formatting that much quicker. I use it for everything from quick restaurant recs to more reflective journal-style writing. Tags let you group entries across trips, and the integrated OpenStreetMap view ties everything together visually. The nice part about it all is that it’s all optional. You can categorize as much or as little as you want. You don’t need to know how to use a complex database or fiddle with formatting — it just works.
For the first time, I wasn’t switching between multiple apps to get through the day.
One of the things I’ve come to love is how easy it is to glance back and get a bird’s-eye view of my travel history. With other apps, things get siloed with a one trip per doc style, or half-written entries scattered across different platforms. With AdventureLog, everything is in one place. I can scroll through months of travel, click into a trip, and instantly drop back into that headspace. It feels more like a living archive than a planner, especially when coupled with the built-in calendar that gives me a bird’s eye view of upcoming trips.
And because it runs entirely on my own server, nothing leaves that space unless I export it myself. There’s no data collection, no cloud sync to opt out of, and no analytics running quietly in the background. If you’re interested in self-hosting, you probably value that just as much as me. By default, I can only access it on my home network. However, I’ve configured a remote proxy as well for on-the-go access.
If the idea of self-hosting sounds intimidating, it’s not. The installation process for AdventureLog is one of the smoothest I’ve encountered. I used Docker on my Synology NAS, but it runs just as well on a Raspberry Pi, home server, or cloud instance. The documentation is detailed and clear, with effectively a single Docker command that pulls the image, sets up your data and media folders, and gets the app running on your local network.
On my setup, I mounted everything to Volume 2, which is where my Docker install lives, and exposed the right ports for the container. Once I opened it in my browser, AdventureLog walked me through creating my account and setting up the first trip. No dependencies to figure out, and no need to register for any third-party APIs. The app is fully self-contained.
There’s no official mobile app, but the responsive design makes it feel at home on any screen size. If you prefer, you can add it to your homescreen as a shortcut. That’s what I’ve done. I use Tailscale to access my NAS while traveling, but you can just as easily expose it via a reverse proxy, like the one built into Synology NAS drives.
Reclaiming the joy of travel planning
Most travel apps are built around a business model, not your travel needs. Even the most polished ones are ultimately there to sell you something. It could be flights, hotels, local tours, a premium tier, or in many cases, your own data. If you just want a tool to plan and document your trips, these apps can often feel cluttered and overdesigned. Those are the last things you want to deal with when on the road. AdventureLog is the opposite. It doesn’t try to sell anything. There are no ads, no feature limits, and no pop-ups asking you to upgrade. It gives you a clean, functional space to plan trips, take notes, and revisit past travels. That simplicity is what makes it more useful than most commercial alternatives for me.
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