In The Future Passengers Will Whizz Through Passport Control In A Heartbeat

De Wikifliping

In the future, passengers will whizz through passport control in a heartbeat.
That's because according to leading futurists and scientists, 'biometric heartbeat passports' will replace traditional passports, with travellers' unique cardiac signatures being read as a form of ID.
It's just one of the many astonishing revelations in the easyJet 2070 Future Travel Report, which presents a vision of how we will travel and enjoy our holidays in 50 years' time, with printed hotel buffets and 'smart' plane seats that adapt to the shape of the passenger also on the horizon.
The report's authors include Professor Birgitte Andersen of Birkbeck, University of and CEO of Big Innovation Centre; Dr Melissa Sterry, design scientist and complex systems theorist; and renowned futurists Shivvy Jervis and sablondtf Dr Patrick Dixon, as well as Director of Transport Systems at Cranfield University, Professor Graham Braithwaite, and Nikhil Sachdeva, Principal for aerospace and defence and sustainable aviation at consultancy Roland Berger.
They detail in the report how the airport journey and air travel experience will be 'revolutionised by technological advances', explaining that the biometric heartbeat passport system would see passengers' heartbeat signatures and biometric details logged on a global system 'in the same way finger-print scanning technology works today'.

The easyJet 2070 Future Travel Report predicts that in 50 years' time 'smart' plane seats will adapt to the shape of the passenger, with inflight entertainment beamed directly in front of them
By 2070 passengers' heartbeat signatures and biometric details will be logged on a global system, making the journey through an airport seamless
Ergonomic and biomimetic 'sensory' plane seats will become the norm, it's revealed, with smart materials not only adapting to passengers' body shapes, but also their height, weight and temperature, to provide 'the ultimate tailored comfort flying experience'.
Inflight entertainment, meanwhile, 'will be beamed directly in front of passengers' eyes, via optoelectronic devices, sablonkaosmurah replacing the need for onboard screens or downloading movies before you fly'.
And e-VTOL (vertical take-off and landing) air taxis will 'do away with the airport car park shuttle' - plus, the journey to the airport will be quicker and more convenient than ever before, sablonsatuan with 85 per cent of passengers transported from their homes to the terminal by e-VTOLs, declare the report authors.
The accommodation experience abroad is also set to be revolutionised, and not just thanks to 3D printed hotel buffet food 'allowing holidaymakers to 3D print whatever they want to eat for breakfast, lunch and dinner'.
The authors predict that there will be subterranean hotels built into the fabric of the earth 'that are super energy efficient and at one with the environment'.
All hotel rooms will be 'smart rooms' in 2070, with guests able to pre-select bed firmness, ambient temperatures and have their favourite music playing when they open the door.
And suitcases won't really be needed - because holidaymakers will be able to 3D print recyclable clothes upon arrival, sablon 'tailored to their perfect fit and style'.
Hotels' eco-credentials will be further enhanced by their power source - guests' footsteps.
The accommodation experience abroad is set to be revolutionised thanks to 3D printed hotel buffet food
'Time-travelling' holiday experiences via haptic suits will allow for visits to historical sites
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