Kuwait Times

Sabre developing travel services for emerging wearable technology

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LONDON: Hot on the heels of showcasing its Google Glass prototype flight finder app at World Travel Market in London, global travel technology company Sabre has announced the next step in developing travel services that work across a number of wearable devices including smartwatch­es and Google Glass. The move reflects the company’s view that wearables will have a dramatic impact on the way consumers shop for and experience travel.

Launched this week, TripCase, Sabre’s leading travel itinerary management app, is the first travel app of its kind to integrate with the highly-anticipate­d Samsung Gear S smartwatch. The integratio­n allows the traveler to click the notificati­on on the watch to open the TripCase app to the relevant place on the mobile device, and will include a click-to-call feature next month. In addition, consumers using Android Wear devices and the Pebble and Pebble Steel watches can receive TripCase travel notificati­ons directly to their wearable devices.

TripCase users wearing these smart devices will receive real-time flight alerts, gate changes and other travel informatio­n convenient­ly on their wrists at a time when minute counts. This initial integratio­n lays the ground work for more advanced TripCase services to be accessible on wearable technology in the future. TripCase is on pace to manage more than 25 million trips in 2014. “As the adoption of wearable technology grows, we want to ensure that the travel industry is ready to leverage this technology and serve travelers on the device they prefer,” said John Samuel, senior vice president of Sabre Traveler Solutions. “Wearable technology is fast becoming a prominent means of customer notificati­on and communicat­ion. We’re looking to take it even further - from a one-way means of communicat­ion to an interactiv­e, on-the-go service experience,” said Samuel.

Researcher­s expect a large proportion of the population to embrace wearable computing in the near future as evidenced by the adoption trajectory of other technology advances like the smart phone and tablets. Juniper Research forecasts that worldwide spending on wearable technology will hit £870 million this year and will reach £12 billion by 2018. Further, wearable computing is already expanding beyond the early adopters and quickly becoming more mainstream, according to Internatio­nal Data Corporatio­n (IDC). The research firm estimates that more than 19 million wearable computing devices will be sold in 2014, and forecasts the global market to reach 111.9 million units in 2018.

Sabre’s Google Glass prototype flight finder app was the company’s first foray into testing wearable devices and operates by finding flights based on a user’s simple voice command,: “Ok Glass, Find a Flight from London Heathrow to Miami in June.”

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