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Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Laptop screening: it's in the bag

Posted on Economist.com

PASSENGERS flying from American airports are to be allowed to put carry-on baggage through X-ray screening machines without having to remove laptops first. The Transportation Security Administration's (TSA) rule change will take effect from August 16th, but only applies to "checkpoint-friendly" baggage. To qualify as such, a bag must meet certain requirements which allow the laptop to be viewed effectively by X-ray operators:

  • A designated laptop-only section
  • The laptop-only section completely unfolds to lay flat on the X-ray belt
  • No metal snaps, zippers or buckles inside, underneath or on top of the
    laptop-only section
  • No pockets on the inside or outside of the laptop-only section
  • Nothing packed in the laptop-only section other than the computer itself

Progress has been swift. The TSA only asked bag manufacturers to come up with
relevant designs in March, and was not expecting to change its rules until the
autumn. But 40 companies quickly submitted prototypes, and the New York
Times
has named Aerovation as
the winner of the race to produce the first publicly available
checkpoint-friendly bag (pictured).

This development scores highly in
three areas: convenience (it's one less task for passengers to perform), speed
(passengers with these bags can be processed more quickly) and security (a
laptop that stays in a bag is less likely to be damaged or stolen off the
conveyor belt). At airports in the European Union (EU), laptops must still be
removed from their bags. Gulliver hopes to see those rules changed to match
America’s as soon as possible.


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