The Future Of... Boarding Passes

June 26, 2009, 2:03pm PDT | Length: 00:02:55
Fed up with long check-in lines before you fly? Tired of trying to remember where you tucked away your boarding pass? ZDNet correspondent Sumi Das explains how paperless mobile boarding could help solve these problems and speed you through the airport.

Transcript

The Future Of... Boarding Passes

Sumi Das: Ah, the joys of travel, baggage fees, flight delays, secondary screenings, and of course, trying to keep track of your boarding pass throughout it all. But, there is hope for frustrated flyers. A smarter way to board is waiting in the wings. In the future you can put away the paper and whip out your cell phone.

Music Sumi Das: The key to paperless mobile boarding is this, a 2 dimensional bar code. It was created by the International Air Transport Association and the committee of airlines to enable bar-coded boarding passes, a cheaper, more efficient alternative to magnetic stripe technology. Bar-coded boarding passes can be printed at home. The 2D bar codes can also be sent to a mobile phone or PDA, opening the door for paperless boarding. Passengers would submit their mobile numbers when booking their flights, then before check in the airline would send the mobile boarding pass by e-mail or text. At security and at the boarding gate the bar code is scanned on the display. Passengers could check in anywhere they have Internet access. No need to hunt down a printer. And if they are not checking bags, passengers can head straight to security. Other benefits, it is one less thing to keep track of and the 2D bar code can store information for multiple legs. So, even if it takes three flights to reach your destination, you only need one mobile boarding pass. So what if your phone dies or there is some other snafu? Boarding passes can always be printed at self-service kiosks. To prevent misuse and ensure the traveler is using a boarding pass issued to them, not someone else, the bar code incorporates near military grade encryption. The Transportation Security Administration says the technology increases its ability to detect fraudulent boarding passes. The administration plans to expand the program in the near future. Mobile boarding testing began in 2007 and is now offered at 18 airports in the U.S. by five airlines. With passengers keen to save time, airports and the government eager to bolster security, paperless boarding may take off before long. For Smart Planet, I am Sumi Das.

==== Transcribed by Automatic Sync Technologies ====

The Future Of... Composting

The Future Of... Composting

Take a closer look at your trash before you toss it. Can it go in your compost pile? It's not...

The Future Of... Shopping

The Future Of... Shopping

What store has the new iPad in stock? Who has the best deal on platform beds? Where can I buy...

The Future Of... Solar Cells

The Future Of... Solar Cells

High oil prices and the BP spill are just two real reminders of how energy dependent we truly...

The Future Of... Packaging

The Future Of... Packaging

Packing material is no friend to the environment. It takes significant energy to produce and...

The Future Of...Remote Controls

The Future Of...Remote Controls

How often do you lose the TV remote? ZDNet correspondent Sumi Das explains why the days of...

The Future Of... Mobile Device Chargers

The Future Of... Mobile Device Chargers

No power? No problem. ZDNet correspondent Sumi Das takes a look at kinetic energy technology...

The Future Of... Concierges

The Future Of... Concierges

Traveling for work can take you to little-known cities, but that doesn't mean you need to wander...

The Future Of... Credit Cards

The Future Of... Credit Cards

They're a modern-day must. Anyone who's ever forgotten their credit card at home or worse, lost...

6
Comments

Join the conversation!

Just In

RE: The future of... Boarding passes
adaviel 8th Sep 2010
I tried this on WestJet. "just display this email". Big hassle - everyone and his dog wants to see the fool thing, so you have to have the phone/tablet powered up, with a bright display and the ticket centered on the screen, in your hand while you are trying to balance carryon, passport etc. without dropping something. If the tech fails (lost message, battery dead, dropped and broken device) you will probably be tossed off the plane if you don't have a paper backup.
Great idea in principle, though.
0 Votes
+ -
The future
davecason 29th Jun 2009
What future!? - Westjet our Calgary based airline in Canada has been doing that for months ... try to keep up kids !! OK!?
0 Votes
+ -
My Nokia could do that years ago
The 'G-Man.' 30th Jun 2009
Future, ha!
0 Votes
+ -
RE: The future of... Boarding passes
Stuart Gross 6th Jul 2009
NZ has been running bar code scanned passes for at least 6 months now. Regular passengers even have a tag (usually attached to the cell phone) that contains their flight data etc and goes thru the same scanning process.
Oh and we also check in our own bags at most of the major cities.
0 Votes
+ -
The future?
twirth5 7th Jul 2009
When I was in Seoul last summer, it was the preferred way of boarding, even on trains. The future? Yeah right!

Our technological lifestyles are rapidly being overtaken by the rest of the world while we bicker and argue over basics such as airline luggage fees, upgrades to our 30 y/o FAA radar system, road and bridge mainentance and the burning of coal.
0 Votes
+ -
RE: The future of... Boarding passes
hforman@... 25th Feb 2010
You'd think that by now, we could skip the barcode and just use a fingerprint.
0 Votes
+ -
I tried this on WestJet. "just display this email". Big hassle - everyone and his dog wants to see the fool thing, so you have to have the phone/tablet powered up, with a bright display and the ticket centered on the screen, in your hand while you are trying to balance carryon, passport etc. without dropping something. If the tech fails (lost message, battery dead, dropped and broken device) you will probably be tossed off the plane if you don't have a paper backup.
Great idea in principle, though.

Join the conversation!

Formatting +
BB Codes - Note: HTML is not supported in forums
  • [b] Bold [/b]
  • [i] Italic [/i]
  • [u] Underline [/u]
  • [s] Strikethrough [/s]
  • [q] "Quote" [/q]
  • [ol][*] 1. Ordered List [/ol]
  • [ul][*] · Unordered List [/ul]
  • [pre] Preformat [/pre]
  • [quote] "Blockquote" [/quote]

The best of ZDNet, delivered

ZDNet Newsletters

Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox

White Papers, Webcasts, & Resources

Facebook Activity