According to the news of the tourism News Center, which is the news source of the tourism sector in Turkey, EasyJet 2070: the future travel report predicts that in just 50 years, passengers' unique heartbeat signatures and biometric information will be recorded in a global system, just like the way fingerprint scanning technology works today.
While the academics who prepared the report claim that by 2070, passengers can expect biomimetic sensory aircraft seats that adapt to the body shape of the person, optoelectronic in-flight entertainment and digital holiday concierges projected directly into the eyes of the passengers. It is envisaged that it will turn into smart rooms with beds and ambient temperature, where guests pre-selected music is played.
According to experts, 3D printing will also enable guests to print recyclable holiday apparel when they arrive at their destination, while 3D printed hotel buffet food will allow vacationers to print whatever they want to eat while reducing food waste.
Professor Birgitte Andersen from Birkbeck College, who chaired the report, said: “Innovation is at the heart of my work and it is clear that the world of travel will look very different in 2070 thanks to emerging technologies. "The detailed analysis of the experts who put this report together is extremely exciting and I can't wait to see what the future holds for travel in the next decades."
Noting that the results of the report are incredibly exciting, EasyJet CEO Johan Lundgren said he knows EasyJet will see many of these predictions continue to lead the way for future vacationers to become reality.
While the academics who prepared the report claim that by 2070, passengers can expect biomimetic sensory aircraft seats that adapt to the body shape of the person, optoelectronic in-flight entertainment and digital holiday concierges projected directly into the eyes of the passengers. It is envisaged that it will turn into smart rooms with beds and ambient temperature, where guests pre-selected music is played.
According to experts, 3D printing will also enable guests to print recyclable holiday apparel when they arrive at their destination, while 3D printed hotel buffet food will allow vacationers to print whatever they want to eat while reducing food waste.
Professor Birgitte Andersen from Birkbeck College, who chaired the report, said: “Innovation is at the heart of my work and it is clear that the world of travel will look very different in 2070 thanks to emerging technologies. "The detailed analysis of the experts who put this report together is extremely exciting and I can't wait to see what the future holds for travel in the next decades."
Noting that the results of the report are incredibly exciting, EasyJet CEO Johan Lundgren said he knows EasyJet will see many of these predictions continue to lead the way for future vacationers to become reality.