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Hotel Tracks Towels With RFID Chips

nonprofiteer writes "An unnamed hotel is now putting RFID tags in their towels: 'The Honolulu hotel (the hotels have asked to remain anonymous, just to keep you guessing) says it was taking a bath to the tune of 4,000 pool towels per month, a number that it has reduced to just 750 (a savings of $16,000 per month). And that's just at the pool.' It's unclear what they do if the towel flies to the Midwest."

8 of 173 comments (clear)

  1. RFID chips in laundry by Pneathery · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My Uncle, and his family own a dry cleaning business in north Carolina and they have been doing this for years. It has caused the dry cleaners to make more money, as well as their clients. Plus as everything comes into the plant, it gets sorted so easily. You can run a cart through a scanner, and the computer reads everything in the cart, telling it where to go, and it is tracked from start to finish. The best part is, the cleaners and their customers make the agreements on the items that are supposed to be cleaned, not the actual pieces being cleaned, so they can tell the hospital who didn't turn in their shirts that week, yet collect for cleaning them. It is the future of dry cleaners.

    1. Re:RFID chips in laundry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Did you know that RFID tags are now embedded in Aluminum foil? THAT'S RIGHT!!! THEY ARE TRACKING YOUR TINFOIL HAT!!!!

  2. The hotel -- The Hilton Hawaiian Village by mbates · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Hilton Hawaiian Village. Signs all over the place that the towels are tracked and you will be charged if it is not returned.

  3. Re:Nuke the chip by LearnToSpell · · Score: 4, Funny

    Free towel, I guess.

  4. Well damn by Dyinobal · · Score: 4, Funny

    I often pop my towel in the microwave for a few seconds to make it nice and toasty. I wonder if I've ever nuked me any chips?

  5. WHY would you want one? by wickerprints · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's what I can't wrap my mind around (no pun intended). Even the most plush hotel towels are laundered and reused by guests, and the vast majority of hotel towels aren't really that high quality to begin with. Is the economy so bad that people are resorting (again, no pun intended) to taking used hotel towels instead of buying their own for a few bucks?

    Despite the use of what must be copious amounts of chlorine and near-autoclave cleaning, just imagine what some people leave on those towels. You still want them?

  6. Re:old news, or a hoax. by LordLimecat · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This, right here, is proof that when people want something for free, they will have no problem rationalizing it-- be it free music, or free software, or free towels.

  7. Re:Ok but I would by bledri · · Score: 4, Insightful

    take a towel from the maid's cart. It isn't registered to anyone and they are always sitting there in the hallway unattended.

    One question: Why?

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