Consider that in the next few years we will have a collection of robots performing varying tasks such as cleaning, storage and retrieval, tail-to-tail bag delivery, refueling, autonomous wheelchairs, busses to remote stands, hospitality, or security. However, these robots are not fantastical humanoid machines capable of varied tasks.
In fact, the robots of the future are less exciting, and probably quite dumb: they will be deployed to carry out mundane and repetitive tasks that are fundamental to the smooth operation of an airport. These robots are likely to get lost, get in each other’s way, and get stuck—unless we can find a way to manage these robots in a coordinated way.
The solution is in software
With the potentially high number of robots roaming our airports, the key question and challenge is: how do we safely and efficiently deploy heterogeneous fleets of robots within highly controlled environments such as airports? The current barrier to having robots everywhere isn’t electronics or mechanics, but rather software—software to coordinate robots, to be more precise.
The industry will need to find ways to:
- Register and deploy robots
- Supply navigation maps
- Track movements
- Make robots aware of each other and provide a way for them to interact
- Assign robot priorities and right of ways
- Control all robots from a single airport dashboard
Approaches that allow for meaningful data exchange between robots with differing capabilities and from different vendors means that we must start thinking about common middleware to manage them.
Middleware tailored to the travel industry
The middleware emerging today looks promising but it would have to be investigated to see if it could form the basis of something tailored to the travel industry. For example, security – both physical and virtual – would need to be closely examined. Airports need to supply geospatial maps securely and easily to devices using an agreed standard (such as the work being done by the ACI World ACRIS working group) and all communications between devices would need to be secure and encrypted.
But whatever the solution, this cannot be done in isolation. SITA believes that we should be addressing these issues with industry partners through the ACI World IT Standing Committee where we can explore the creation of a framework or standard that will become the foundation for robots just like CUPPS, CUTE, and CUSS.
If we have a common framework, the future of airports robotics looks promising. If we don’t get that framework, robots are likely to create more chaos than added value.
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