But will it work????
From the Disney Blogs:
http://parksandresorts.wdpromedia.co...00912SMALL.jpg
Experimental Entrance for Epcot
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But will it work????
From the Disney Blogs:
http://parksandresorts.wdpromedia.co...00912SMALL.jpg
Experimental Entrance for Epcot
What are we looking at? A new card-scanning geegaw administering contraption? Elucidate, please.
I see the positives. It would be easier to bring in Wheelchairs, strollers etc. Not having to wait for CM to swing a gate open.
Negatives? I can imagine too many bodies in one tiny space. I can just see a Mom trying to do her ticket and then her kids, a stroller behind her getting in way of other kiosks, all while others are wiggling into the next kiosk.
Then the poor CM trying to keep track of who has swiped who in during busy entry times.
It will work if they organize a line to go up to each stall. Have a CM direct you to the next open one...kind of like when checking in a bag at a busy airport, a worker directs you to the next open kiosk...same concept here. If there is organization it could be effective...I would fear at high entry times that that line could get extremely long, though
And imagine trying to help the people through the lines that are oblivious as to what to do, also like airport check-ins.
Looks like a kind of tight area, but I'm sure it was researched and tested, so it should be okay.
I agree that the concept is a good idea... but the execution might be a different story. We shall see in the future if it actually works!
Very interesting
What next? Whole body scans? Disney is so a**l about not letting anyone else use someone else's ticket. The whole biometric thing is a joke (and a waste of money) as they turn them off during busy periods when "cheating" is likely to occur. I would venture a guess that my AP has not worked on the first try at least half the times we were here, and had my finger rescanned at least 5 times. I even had to show my photo ID once after 5 tries. One CM even asked me if that is the same finger I usually use. I told and showed her that it's the only index finger I have on my right hand. :lol:
Interesting.......I agree - looks like a 'better in theory rather than practice contraption'.
I think this is a great idea... the bottleneck has always been those finicky scanning machines. Now you will not have to wait in line (as long) to start trying your ticket the 2 or 3 times it usually takes to go through. The real solution is RFID's or something like an ID chip in some driver license and credit cards embedded in the ticket.
Now if they could just streamline the bag check!>)
I think a conveyor of some sort may be the answer to faster bag checking.
Lou - please pass my idea up to Disney;>)
Disney is probably working towards this "upgrade" one day.
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I'm gonna have to agree with the "it looks interesting but wonder how they'll execute it/looks like there'll be a huge bottleneck/what about the tourists who can't figure it out" crowd(s). ;)
This IS the research and testing phase. :) There is no guarantee that this design will be adopted in general.
They haven't changed anything about the biometrics with this as far as I've been told, although it looks like the scanners are a different (cheaper?) design.
They don't ALWAYS turn them off. They were definitely working most of our stay in December (I think there was one day they were off out of the several rope drops we were at). I actually had some troubles with the scanner that I think may have been due to the cold more than anything.
There is some small subset of the population who have fingers such that the scanners have trouble reading them. Perhaps yours is one.