companies & products news research white papers webinars videos project help
 
 
 
Premium Reports
Event Calendar
Slide shows

Slabb

Reach thousands of potential customers through KioskMarketplace and its sister sites.

Click to find out how.

 

 

 

 
>Asia & Pacific Rim

    

Mobile boarding passes herald cell-phone self-service for travel

Jacob Bennett editor
• 21 Jan 2009

As more airports adopt two-dimensional boarding passes for cell phones in 2009, airlines will expand their mobile-service offerings and the technology will spread to other travel-related industries, experts say.

NCR Corp., which has worked with Delta and other airlines to develop mobile check-in and boarding passes, is ready with a full suite of mobile features, including flight check-in, flight status updates and schedule viewing, and booking and ticketing for loyalty members with online registered profiles, said Tania Ladic, NCR vice president of marketing for the travel industry.

"Think of your phone more like a computer than a telephone," Ladic said. "That’s the way things are going."
 
story continues below...  
 

 
This story and all of our great free content is supported by:  
Corporate Safe Specialists   Corporate Safe Specialists | Safes | Cash Management 
Take your kiosk to the next level...accept customers' cash and track its flow to the bank.  Enhance your customers' experience while securing your cash.
 

 

The idea isn’t to replace kiosks but to give customers another self-service option, Ladic said. In some industries, the two-dimensional barcodes could work in tandem with self-service kiosks.

The process for receiving a mobile boarding pass varies slightly with each airline, but generally it involves checking in for a flight on a Web-enabled phone or computer and opting to have a two-dimensional barcode sent as an email or multi-media message to a phone, where it can be displayed and scanned like a paper ticket. The two-dimensional barcodes differ from one-dimensional UPC codes because they display encrypted information both horizontally and vertically, whereas one-dimensional codes, such as UPC symbols scanned during retail sales, provide data only across vertical lines.

Airlines are currently working with the Transportation Security Administration to test two-dimensional mobile boarding passes. Five airlines at 14 airports have tried the system since Continental began testing it at Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport in November 2007. Industry experts expect use to become widespread this year as airlines and the TSA become comfortable that the system is working smoothly.

The TSA worked with the airlines to develop scanning and encryption standards and add an extra layer of security, said Lauren Gaches, a TSA spokeswoman.

"My understanding is there are no major issues," Gaches said. "I have seen somebody use it and it went very smoothly."

Globally, many mass transit systems, especially Japanese rail systems, and even cinemas and other public venues are adopting mobile ticketing.

NCR’s Ladic expects mobile check-in technology to expand into other travel segments such as hotels and car rental companies by the end of the year. The functionality would mirror that of the current mobile solution for airlines, where customers could check in on a phone and receive a 2D barcode to be scanned at a kiosk, where they could receive a car rental agreement or obtain a room key, for example.

Airlines will also continue looking for ways to expand mobile self-service, said Mary Clark, a spokeswoman for Continental.

"This is something that’s going to continue to grow," she said.

 



Related articles on this topic: Asia & Pacific Rim

Delhi airport offers self check-in kiosks
Jetstar Airways installs self-check kiosks in Oz
Upgrades, compatibility complicate self-service customs plans in New Zealand
Internet kiosks to help bridge the digital divide in New Delhi
Universal Travel Group expanding travel-services kiosks in China

 

© 2010 NetWorld Alliance LLC. All rights reserved.

MOST POPULAR
  • Special summit will again offer secure, open forum for deployers
  • Video game- and DVD-rental/game buy-back kiosk company e-Play suspends operations
  • Focus on Escalate Retail's new Pocket Kiosk
  • Movie Gallery cites 'cannibalization' by redbox kiosks in bankruptcy filing
  • Truck stop technology
  • Bill in Congress would mandate blind-accessible interfaces on all kiosks
  • NCR, Blockbuster continuing westward expansion
  • Iowa library builds own self-checkout kiosk, saves tens of thousands of dollars
  • Bike-share kiosk effort pedals forward in Minneapolis
  • NCR, Diebold fare better than expected, despite financial drops

  • NEWS HEADLINES
    Bill Pay: Texas students use kiosk to pay utility bills
    Patient Self-Service: Optometry group installs free vision-screening kiosks in supermarkets
    Supermarkets & Grocery: Big Y Foods implements NCR deli-ordering kiosks
    Retail - Specialty: Kiosks part of Richmond OTB saloon
    DVD Rental Kiosk: Blockbuster may soon file for bankruptcy: Report
    Europe: Barcelona, Madrid airports implement kiosks with biometrics
    New report explores the ROI of self-service in restaurants
    More News Headlines

    FEATURE STORIES
    More Feature Stories

    WHITE PAPERS
    More White Papers

    FEATURED PRODUCTS
    More Featured Products

    VIDEO GALLERY
    More Videos

    PHOTO GALLERIES
    More Photo Galleries

    ALSO ON NETWORLD ALLIANCE
     
       
     
       
     
    © 2010 NetWorld Alliance

    Get the latest kiosk news delivered to
    your in-box.
    Click here to sign up for free.