New cruise ship a floating heaven for tech geeks and a robot hit on my wife
By Nick Barber From PC World
Walking up the gangway to board Royal Caribbean’s tech-laden Quantum of the Seas, it was hard not to marvel. Across the harbor was Manhattan, and at 348 meters the new ship is almost as long as the Empire State Building is tall. But it’s what the ship contains that made my inner geek salivate.
While most passengers were ogling the food options I checked the speed of the satellite WiFi and tested the raft of other technology onboard—including robot waiters and virtual seascapes—that the company hopes will increase passenger convenience.
Billed as a smart ship, the Quantum of the Seas will make trips from New York harbor (Cape Liberty in Bayonne, New Jersey, specifically) to the Caribbean until the middle of 2015, when it embarks on an odyssey to reposition to its new home port of Shanghai. As a tech reporter invited on board for a few days to check it out, I was determined to maintain a skeptical stance, but some of the futuristic services enticed me to capture footage of gadget after cool gadget.
Satellite Wi-Fi
Quantum’s Wi-Fi is provided by a constellation of satellites from O3B Networks. The last satellite went into space in July and Royal Caribbean’s Allure of the Seas was the first ship to deploy the service, about four weeks before Quantum.
On the first morning at sea, when we were about 100 miles off the East Coast I clocked 4.65 megabits per second down and 4.03 megabits per second up, as tested with speedtest.net. Later in the day it was 3.85 megabits per second down and 0.85 megabits per second up. During the second test I was still able to stream high definition video on Netflix and YouTube.
The ship will have three tiers of Wi-Fi service available for passengers to purchase. There will be hourly, daily and full voyage packages that are $20, $40 and $160, respectively. The full voyage price is based on seven nights and all three prices are for the middle tier of speed—what Royal calls premium—designed for posting photos, browsing and streaming standard definition video.
During our tests we were given access to the top tier, or premium plus, of service. The ship allowed all passengers to connect to the network for free during this sail. There did seem to be some issues with the Wi-Fi while we were in port. It was difficult to connect and the connection was slow or non-existent at times, but those problems seemed to be fixed once we set sail.
“We’ve only been able to get the capacity utilization up to about two-thirds of what we have on board [600 megabits],” said Bill Martin, CIO for Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd.
He said that because there is capacity, the company doesn’t need to limit demand for the service by charging high prices. He doesn’t expect the service to be a big moneymaker for the company. It should only account for about 4 percent of revenue on the ship, according to Carloa Mengolini, vice president of onboard revenue. Food and beverage accounts for about 30 percent.
Martin said that other ships charge up to 75 cents per minute for connectivity, significantly slower than Quantum’s.
RFID and luggage tracking
“We don’t lose bags, but our passengers think we will,” joked Richard Fain, chairman and CEO of Royal Caribbean Cruises.
When passengers board the ship, they will drop their bags at check-in and each bag will get an RFID tag. Through Royal Caribbean’s Royal IQ smartphone application, guests will be able to track their bags from the curb to their room. Fain said it’s helpful because bags aren’t delivered instantly and passengers can enjoy the ship while waiting for an alert that their bags arrived. For this preview sailing we were told not to bring more luggage than we could carry ourselves. Porters weren’t available so I wasn’t able to test the tracking technology. It’s too bad because when I’m traveling with my video gear, packing light is not my forte.
The ship is cashless and passengers use RFID wristbands to pay for items, open their stateroom doors and check in during muster drills. The muster drill, required for everyone on board, happens before the ship sets sail and is a way for passengers to familiarize themselves with emergency procedures. Passengers are assigned a specific spot on the boat to assemble and the crew is able to check in passengers using the RFID wristbands. That information is sent in real time to the bridge, where the captain can monitor the status of an evacuation.
Virtual balconies
Of the 2,090 staterooms on board, about 400 are interior rooms with no live view of the ocean. Instead, passengers can view the passing sea through a virtual balcony. On the bridge of the ship are two $20,000 Red Epic cameras capturing the ocean in 5K resolution. The image is transmitted within a few milliseconds to an 80-inch high definition display turned on its side in the guest’s stateroom.
“We use high speed processing because if what you feel doesn’t match the motion of the water then you may start to feel sick,” said Martin.
Martin said that the virtual balconies are not going to be repurposed for other content. Guests can turn them on and off and change the volume, but they can’t watch a football game and they won’t be used for ship announcements.
“If you do anything else with it, you start to lose the illusion,” Martin said.
Robotic bartender
Two robots on the ship can strain, muddle, mix and shake about a thousand drinks a day at the Bionic Bar. Set in one of the high traffic areas on the ship, the two Kuka robots created cocktails after passengers scanned their RFID wristbands and designed their own custom drink or chose one from a menu. After adding a drink to the queue, the robots got to work, whizzing and whirring around 30 liquors and 21 mixers. About 60 seconds later a small conveyer belt delivered the drinks to the passengers.
The origin of the project had nothing to do with Royal Caribbean.
“It was a request from Google for their IO conference in May to show how new technology is changing the way we live,” said Michael Lewis, a developer at Makr Shakr who worked on the robots.
“The Bionic Bar doesn’t reduce staffing,” said Richard Fain. “It’s actually more work.” He said the bar needs two bartenders to help passengers with the app and to answer questions.
The robots are calibrated to millimeter accuracy to know where all the drinks and mixers are located. Beside the robots, the system displayed drink analytics with the most popular beverage being a liquor-filled Long Island Iced Tea.
Sister ship Anthem of the Seas, a virtual duplicate of the Quantum, will be cruising from Southampton, England, to the Mediterranean in 2015.
To watch video go to: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PEaCEbhHY18&feature=youtu.be
For more on this story go to: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2849992/new-cruise-ship-a-floating-heaven-for-tech-geeks.html
Screen shots from video
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A robot bartender hit on my wife during our cruise
“Welcome aboard! You must go to the bar with the robot bartenders!”
Rarely have so many of my favorite words cohabited in the same sentence. But that was the recommendation I got upon boarding Royal Caribbean’s so-awesome-it’s-ridiculous ship, Quantum of the Seas. The ship is a floating technological marvel with enhanced Wi-Fi, downloadable apps that help you find your way around, and wristbands that open your stateroom doors.
But none of Quantum’s perks are as deliriously awesome as the Bionic Bar. It does away with the old-fashioned inconvenience of having to shout to get your bartender’s attention by eliminating the bartender altogether: Two industrial robots prepare, mix, shake, and/or stir your drink and bring it to you.
It’s the kind of thing Star Trek’s Captain Picard would dream of — that is, if he ever drank anything stronger than Earl Grey tea.
“It was a very whimsical idea.” Royal Caribbean CIO Bill Martin told me as we relaxed in Quantum’s Concierge Lounge. “Someone said, ‘What if we could have a bartender that was a robot?” That led Royal Caribbean to partner up with robotics firm Makr Shakr to create the Bionic Bar, which is now one of the most talked-about features of the heavily-hyped Quantum of the Seas. “It is amazing to us the amount of interest in it,” Martin told me. “People are just really enamored with it. When you see [a robot] close up, it’s personal because it’s making a drink that you’re going to drink.”
I was sold. The second I finished my chat with Martin, I ran down to Deck 5 to try out the Bionic Bar for the first time. I was met there by my wife, Tracey, who had a drink in her hand and a sly grin on her face.
Modal Trigger
An electronic board shows you where your drink is in the queue. The robot bartenders also apparently use it as their own personal Tinder.
Photo: Royal Caribbean
“The bartender just flirted with me!” she announced. That statement didn’t surprise me; there aren’t any downsides to being married to an attractive woman, but having strangers hit on your wife when you leave her alone in a public place is a fact of life and…
Waitaminute! I thought. Isn’t the bartender a…
“…robot!” she said. (Yes, she sometimes finishes my thoughts. Scares the hell out of me when she does that.) During my chat with Bill Martin, Tracey had started pre-graming at the Bionic Bar, where she ordered a drink using its virtual ordering system. And on the big display that shows drink orders, the “bartender” had written next to her name: “If I had a heart it would belong to you.”
Yes, that robotic bartender just flirted with my wife — and very well, she informed me. She should know; she’s a flirting expert.
The whole thing was amusing but a tad disconcerting. Robots hitting on people’s wives — is that some kind of first step toward machines becoming self-aware? Who knows, the prelude to a Terminator 2: Judgment Day-style apocalypse might be a drink-making C-3PO mackin’ on some dude’s girl.
Man or machine, besmirching my manly honor by hitting on my wife was an insult of the highest order. Maybe I should have confronted this robotic interloper. But I really wanted a drink. And in my book, thirst trumps honor (maybe I should translate that into Latin and incorporate it in the Lipsey family crest).
So Tracey, who was halfway through her first robot-prepared drink, walked me through the drink-ordering process. Set up throughout the Bionic Bar are several tablets that you access by touching the screen with your “WOWband” — one of Quantum’s personalized RFID (radio-frequency identification) wristbands distributed to all the passengers; it allows you to navigate the ship, make purchases, and open your stateroom.
Once you’re logged in, you select your drink from a menu of the ship’s specialty cocktails. Or you can make your own from the menu list. When you’re done selecting your drink, you have the option to name and save your concoction so that you can order it later in your trip.
Soon, the name of my drink — which I called “Sidney’s Cocktail” — was presented on two big screens on either side of the bar that showed my order and the orders of the other bar patrons. Seeing your name on a big screen along with the names of all the other passengers can unexpectedly fulfill any TV-fed fantasy of truly going to a bar where everybody knows your name.
After a five-minute wait in the lightly crowded bar, the robo-bartenders got to my drink. I’d ordered a Jack and Diet Coke (the latter being what turned out to be the healthiest thing I ingested during the trip), and the robot took care of it quickly.
And hence the main problem in dealing with robot bartenders: They can be a little literal. Most people walk into a bar and say, “I’ll have a Jack and Coke,” and the bartender knows what they mean. But I ordered my drink without inputting important details, such as measurements and ice. So “Sam” (what I call my new bartender/romantic rival) defaulted to a one-part measure for each ingredient and no ice, resulting in my getting what was essentially a shot.
“This never happened on Star Trek,” I thought to myself when presented with my unexpectedly fun-sized concoction. But that was my fault: The high-tech world has no place for ambiguity. Oh, well — live and learn. And bottoms up!
At the end of the day, the Bionic Bar was a big highlight of a terrific cruise. I could come home and tell my friends that a robot made my drink — which is almost, but not quite, as cool as being able to say, “A robot hit on me.”
IMAGES:
Meet the bartenders at the Bionic Bar (did they cost $6 million?) Photo: Instagram/Royal Caribbean
An electronic board shows you where your drink is in the queue. The robot bartenders also apparently use it as their own personal Tinder. Photo: Royal Caribbean
The WOWband has multiple uses aboard Quantum of the Seas, including unlocking your stateroom, interfacing with the ship’s map, and ordering drinks. Photo: Royal Caribbean
For more on this story and video go to: http://nypost.com/2014/11/19/the-robot-bartender-hit-on-my-wife-during-our-cruise/