LAS VEGAS -- Our travel experiences are Watch I Did It For You Onlinesuffused with technology, from the moment we start planning a trip online until we pay for it through our online credit card account. But there are gaps, especially if you take an ocean cruise. Get on a big boat and you can feel like you're stepping back into the 1970s.
The Carnival Medallion, a wearable IoT device for Carnival Cruise Ship passengers, may change all that.
SEE ALSO: LG's new 4K TV is thinner than an iPhoneIt essentially turns every passenger into a Bluetooth low energy beacon, lighting up fresh experiences in virtually every part of a Carnival Cruise ship and even in many of the activities that surround a cruise. With the Ocean Medallion, passengers will be able to do everything from unlocking cabin doors to making purchases, playing games, navigating the ship, finding friends and getting personalized service based on data sent to the Carnival Cruise system.
Carnival Corporation introduced the new technology late Wednesday at CES in Las Vegas. It's the first time a travel company has made a major announcement at the consumer electronics event. The company's CEO, Arnold Donald, will deliver a keynote and demonstrate the technology at the event on Thursday.
The wearable Ocean Medallion sounds quite similar to Disney Magic Kingdom Magic Bands, but differs in one key way: Ocean Medallions do not need to be tapped on any readers.
The quarter-sized 1.8 ounce, weatherproof Ocean Medallion will, on supported cruises, be given out for free to every single cruise customer. Passengers will not have to return them. Carnival intends for guests to keep them as mementos.
The device, which can be accessorized to be worn on the wrist, as a pendant or even thrown in a pocket, is paired with a digital portal called Ocean Compass. Some of the experiences enabled by the device will happen on the phone, but most will be enabled by the cruise ship itself, which, as long as it's an "Ocean Medallion Class Ship," will have embedded sensors and screens that work with the system throughout the ship.
This means the ship will always know where you are and react and respond accordingly. The data is all managed in real-time. For example, since every cabin door has a sensor, the ship will know when you're approaching your cabin and can even prepare it by, say, turning on the air conditioning before you get there.
Carnival Cruise executives said there's a side benefit to all this sensor data. Knowing where guests are and aren't helps save on energy, water and food. "Though that's not why we did it," said Carnival Corp. CEO Arnold Donald.
Backing up the the Ocean Medallion system is an edge network or, as Carnival Corp. Chief Experience and Innovation Officer John Padgett explained it, a mini cloud. The cruise ship needs that local cloud because, once the ship sets sail, it can be difficult to reach an internet-based one.
As for what Carnival does with all that data and how it protects the privacy and security of its passengers, Padgett explained that each Ocean Medallion is tokenized and encrypted. Plus, it never actually transmits data, just the ID to let the sensor know you're there, enjoying this particular experience. He noted that it's much more secure than magnetic strips on credit cards, which do exchange data with readers.
And since the virtually the entire system, including the readers, is proprietary, Padgett is not worried about someone trying to clone one of the Medallions. He also believes that their encryption, which sits on top of industry standard encryption, would pretty much thwart hackers.
The Medallion won't alert the crew if you've fallen overboard.
One thing the Medallion won't do is alert the crew if you've fallen overboard. Padgett noted that it is not a safety device. So just be careful with all those drinks you ordered through the coin-sized wearable.
Don't set sail just yet. It's not clear what all this technology will do to the cost of a cruise. And even if the price of a cruise remains relatively static, the first Ocean Medallion-ready ship doesn't set sail until November on Princess Cruises' Regal Princess, followed by The Royal Princess and Caribbean Princess in 2018. Expansion across the whole fleet of Carnival Cruise ships could take years.
Topics Bluetooth CES
Best free April Fools' Day deal: Get a free hot or iced coffee at Dunkin'Password managers are under threat in 2025. What the LastPass breach taught us.Best monitor deal: Save $650 on the Samsung Odyssey gaming monitorKids Kindle deal: 22% off at Amazon after the Big Spring SaleNintendo Switch 2 release date, price announcedUlta Spring Haul Sale: Up to 40% off La RocheUGREEN Nexode 25000mAh 200W power bank drops to $79.99 at AmazonBest Apple deal: Get a 4Today's Hurdle hints and answers for April 2, 2025'The White Lotus' Season 3 finale: 8 predictionsBest soundbar deal: The Sonos Arc is down to $599 at AmazonBest Travel deal: Score JetBlue flights for as low as $49 each wayBest Apple deal: Save $100 on the Apple Studio DisplayHere’s what to do if you give your information to a scammerNYT Strands hints, answers for April 2Garmin Instinct 2 Solar GPS watch now $229.99 at Amazon — save $170The first people to fly in space over the poles got this stunning viewBen & Jerry's Free Cone Day 2025: How to get free ice cream on April 8Best Apple Watch deal: Save $70 on Apple Watch Series 10Shop Kindle books on April 1 and receive double rewards points Street Scene by Jiayang Fan “I Always Start on 8 January” by Sadie Stein Zora Neale Hurston on Zombies by Sadie Stein Christmas with Monte by Colin Fleming New Bram Stoker, and Other News by Sadie Stein Gracie and Cyril: An Oral History by Emily Greenhouse Vispo by Nicole Rudick The Perfect Stocking Stuffer by Sadie Stein Lucky Thirteen by Sadie Stein Apocalyptic Reads, and Other News by Sadie Stein 1984, and Other News by Sadie Stein A Printer Called Lethem, and Other News by Sadie Stein Musical Notes by Sadie Stein William Styron in Letters, Part 4 by William Styron The Beau Monde of Mrs. Bridge by Evan S. Connell In Praise of Bookstore Cats by Sadie Stein Writing in Jewish, and Other News by Sadie Stein On the Twelfth Day of the Twelfth Month of 2012... by Sadie Stein In Memoriam: Evan S. Connell, 1924–2013 by Lorin Stein Louise Bourgeois, Untitled, 1994 by The Paris Review
2.7743s , 10135.9609375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch I Did It For You Online】,New Knowledge Information Network