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Airport Using Google Glass For Security and Passenger Information

An anonymous reader notes this story about how an Amsterdam airport is putting Google Glass to use. "One of Europe's busiest airports, Amsterdam's Schiphol hub in the Netherlands, is trialling Google Glass for use by airport authority officers as a hands-free way to look up gate and airplane information. It's also testing Google's face computer on travelers passing through the terminal in a bid to better understand the 'customer journey', thanks to Glass' first person perspective....Google has pulled back on 'Glass for the masses' — at least for now. It shuttered its Glass Explorer program last month. Although far from killing off Glass, it has handed the project to Nest's Tony Fadell to oversee. Glass lives, as a standalone division within Google that's yet to prove its worth — but which Google evidently isn't willing to give up on, even though it's been forced to have a rethink about its go-to-market strategy. And, in all likelihood, the entire product proposition/design of the hardware."

5 of 36 comments (clear)

  1. A proper use for the technology... by mlts · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Now, this is something I'd assert is a proper use for Google Glass -- a way to help improve workflow. I can see this being useful not just at the airport, but for bank tellers and other retail staff. It not just is a way of presenting info, but if something bad does happen, it is a way of helping prove who did it, especially if it takes place out of the arc of the overhead CCTV cameras.

    This is a lot better use of the technology than trying to cam at the local Alamo Drafthouse.

    1. Re:A proper use for the technology... by pr0t0 · · Score: 2

      Google engineer: But...how can we make Glass more appealing now, as a way of sowing seeds for our next release?

      Tony Fadell: Give them to airport screeners. Everybody loves those guys! And why not? They're hip, edgy, rule-breakers!

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      I'm sorry, but your opinion seems to be wrong.
    2. Re:A proper use for the technology... by geekd · · Score: 2

      And bouncers. Facial recognition automatically identifies banned patrons. Video record proves they checked ID. Video camera verifies IDs from out of state / country.

    3. Re:A proper use for the technology... by AK+Marc · · Score: 2

      Vegas does it on 20 year old PCs. I think you are the one that doesn't know how it works.

  2. Re:Better hack by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 2

    Fairly easy to do that already, though. Problem is people try to take the whole bottle in one unit, which shows up as a vacuum area on the scans. If you switch to flat or tubular bladders, you can use shoes or purse handles or briefcase handles or backpack parts to move the same amount of liquid.

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