Biometrics
Facial
and fingerprint recognition technology is increasingly being leveraged
to expedite passenger processing, as is highlighted by the Aruba Happy
Flow project (left) and CLEAR security lanes (right).
Aruba Happy Flow, which is in operation at Aruba Airport and has been co-developed by Schiphol Group, KLM, the governments of the Netherlands and Aruba, and FTE Global exhibitor Vision-Box, provides the most convincing example yet. Leveraging facial recognition technology, the project removes the need for passengers to show their passport and boarding pass at multiple airport touch points, and the stakeholders involved have told FTE that the project could lay the foundations for the rollout of a wide-reaching European preclearance programme.
Elsewhere, Alaska Airlines has trialled the viability of fingerprint recognition technology as the cornerstone of a domestic single token at San Jose International Airport. In Singapore, Changi Airport Group last month announced that facial recognition technology will be deployed throughout the new Terminal 4, which is due to open in 2017, as part of the rollout of its Fast and Seamless Travel (FAST) programme.
While there is undoubtedly a long way to go before biometrics can replace traditional passenger documents, these implementations suggest that biometric technology is highly likely to be the enabler.
Robotics
Thanks
to a deal between Japan Airport Terminal Co., Ltd. and CYBERDYNE Inc.,
Haneda Airport will be a test bed for the latest robotics technology.
Japan Airport Terminal Co., Ltd. last month signed a Memorandum of Understanding with robotics and technology company CYBERDYNE Inc. The deal will see a range of inventive solutions, such as the “Hybrid Assistive Limb” and luggage transporting robotic devices trialled in the airport environment. Three robot cleaners have also been deployed at Auckland Airport to automate the cleaning process.
At FTE Global 2015, Tina Bergsma, Vice President International Stations, Air France-KLM, will outline how the carrier is leveraging robotics, as well as biometrics, beacons and wearables, in a wide-reaching keynote address in the ‘On the Ground’ conference.
Wearable technology
Copenhagen
Airport is among the airports to have already trialled smartglasses,
while Quebec City International Airport is using Apple Watch to create
operational efficiencies.
What is becoming clear, however, is that wearable technology is not just a fad. In fact, it offers significant operational benefits and Quebec City International Airport’s use of Apple Watch provides a case in point. By equipping its workforce with the devices, the airport has been able to supply staff with real time alerts and notifications to help drive operational efficiency by tapping into the airport management system.
It may not be the most novel, headline-grabbing, passenger-facing deployment, but it certainly shows the true potential value of wearable technology from an operational standpoint.
Big Data and the Internet of Things
Dublin
Airport is making a significant investment in its IT infrastructure to
enable more effective data sharing to help create new efficiencies.
Now on the horizon is the Internet of Things, which will bring further operational benefits to the industry by allowing almost everything – from staff to physical assets in the airport – to be connected and to connect with one another to share their statuses and locations.
Dubai Airports CEO Paul Griffiths has gone on record to note the “enormous potential” of the Internet of Things, and you can guarantee that many other C-level airport and airline executives are playing close attention to its game-changing potential.
Beacons
Google has made a major play in the beacons market with the launch of Eddystone, which will compete with Apple’s iBeacon format.
The sheer number of suppliers, airlines and airports that are investing time and money to try to identify and create these use cases, and Google’s big play in this space with the launch of its Eddystone beacon format, certainly adds weight to the theory that beacons are here to stay.
No comments:
Post a Comment
comment