American Airlines is testing a new technology at three airports across the country during the boarding process that aims to cut down on passengers who try to cut the line.

The technology, which is being tested at Albuquerque International Sunport Airport in New Mexico, Tucson International Airport in Arizona and Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Crystal City, Virginia, alerts gate agents with an audible sound if a passenger tries to scan a ticket ahead of their assigned group.

  • @TheKMAP
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    226 days ago

    Now do it for southwest, where it actually matters.

      • @[email protected]
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        426 days ago

        Not sure who’s job it would replace. Right now policing boarding order is done by one person who is responsible for a bunch of other things that are critical for the flight. Even if they want to trim staff, and they do, that isn’t a place they can do it.

        • justOnePersistentKbinPlease
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          226 days ago

          There is a difference between jobs that are actually able to be automated, and jobs business grads and upper management think can be automated.

          • @[email protected]
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            126 days ago

            That person is responsible for handling the weight and balance for passengers, bags, fuel, and cargo, acting as the interface for the above and below the wing personnel, managing access to the jet bridge and aircraft, securing the aircraft on the ground, and scanning in passengers. Policing boarding order is a very very small part of the job. Even if they find a way to automate the boarding process, you still need an operations agent. Airline management can be questionable but they aren’t that bad.

            More likely would be trying to get rid of the CSRs, something some airlines have done. That causes its own problems though.