‘Internet of Things’ from ‘Internet of Confusion’ at London City Airport

London city airport has become the first commercial aviation industry in the world to test machine-to-machine communication integrated with different technologies known as Internet of Things (IoT). A modernized experience will tend to be different from the missing luggage, delayed flights, and crazy long security lines that often make passengers to either miss their flights or miss their connecting flights.

IoTAccording to the executive vice president of Living PlanIt’s Robin Daniels, “Everything that’s uncomfortable, inconvenient or just a pain in the neck about traveling, we’re trying to turn into a more pleasurable experience.”

London City Airport want to get rid of the many nuisances associated with flying that make people regret flying into London through this technology platform that allows different machines and devices to interact with themselves.

We are expected to see many other advanced features that will involve tracking passengers through a mix of face recognition and crowd-sourcing software that already exists in airports, plus the GPS that is already available in smart devices. Similar technology can insure that a passenger who booked a taxi in advance can exit the airport and step immediately into a waiting car.

The success in making IoT to work will depend on the machine-to–machine (M2M) communication that is currently at its early stages. M2M is the foundation for “smart cars”, vehicles which are tuned in to avoid collision, and “smart lights”, which detect when you’ve woken up and then turn on.

Technology company Living PlanIt and retail developer Milligan will lead the project backed by the UK’s Technology Strategy Board. Over the next year, the airport will integrate different technologies to provide a taste of what’s possible.

“When someone arrives, sensors will detect that person’s frame, and will notify the F&B outlet to get everything ready,” explains Robin Daniels, Living PlanIt’s executive vice president of sales and marketing.

“There’s no reason you can’t have an app on your phone telling you the route and the correct exit in case you intend to find your vehicle,” says Daniels.

Real time tracking system will be in place to monitor luggage to a certain degree. What this means is that passengers and their luggage can be tracked at the same time. If a flyer checks his back but misses his plane, his luggage won’t be boarded.

“If you’re a passenger, there will be no more sitting on a plane waiting for a bag to be found because whoever owns the bag missed their plane and now it has to be unloaded. Everything that’s uncomfortable, inconvenient or just a pain in the neck about traveling, we’re trying to turn into a more pleasurable experience,” says Daniels.

On the retail side, stores in the airport will use a combination of cameras and sensors to monitor buyer behavior and to get a better sense of what types of displays work. They will also be able to offer shoppers customized offers based on previous purchases. But according to Evangeis Ouzounis, from the European Network and Information Security Agency “As we increase our dependency on the Internet of Things, the probability of having problems increases for example the security of Things will surely become a thing.”

“A lot of what they’re doing is putting data together and creating information to give a better customer experience,” says Joe Dignan, a chief analyst for public sector technology at Ovum. “You may get to the point where you walk past a Zara, and it says, ‘we noticed you bout a blouse last week, we have a sale on a skirt that will go with it.'”

Dignan says that some shopping malls have started embedding sensors in the floor to track where people walk, and on hangers to register which items get picked up the most. However some are concerned about safety and privacy issues of the new technology.

“I believe that as we increase our dependency on Internet of Things, and because it is not a fully stable technology per se, the probability of having problems increases,” says Evangeis Ouzounis, the head of the secure infrastructure and services unit at the European Network and Information Security Agency.

“I’m not saying it will happen, but we need to take measures now before the technology becomes commercially available.” Ouzounis points out the potential for hackers to interfere with sensitive travel information and the smooth running of airport systems.

“They might jam a smart device to make systems not available in the airport, or play with the bar code of flight tickets, so that you can have access to a space you shouldn’t have access to,” he says, while admitting that these scenarios are extreme.

For Daniels privacy isn’t really an issue, as passengers can chose whether or not they “opt in”. Furthermore, the technology will actually allow airports to have a more sophisticated security system in place.

“If there’s suddenly a security issue, and someone is suddenly somewhere they shouldn’t be, the authorities can access the day-to-day information more easily,” he says.

Let’s hope the idea of the idea of Internet of Things (IoT) at London city airport will not end up becoming Internet of More Confusion (IoMC)

Source

CNN