"Clocky," the elusive, perky
robotic alarm clock, is just one of the gadgets getting a workout at the
University of Delaware and Courtyard of Marriott's Teaching Hotel.
Clocky's pesky behavior notwithstanding, the goal in creating the
experimental guest room (X-room) is to develop technologies that make
traveling easier for an increasingly demanding clientele.
Among
the features you may find in tomorrow's accommodations:
• Digital
peephole: A video camera captures the view of your visitor at the door
and displays it on an LCD screen inside.
• High-resolution
digital photo frame to keep your family's smiling faces close by.
• In-room workout
with Wii, Nintendo's popular exercise gaming system.
• Bedside
room-environment control panel allowing you to turn up the heat or turn
down the lights.
• An air-powered
shower head and an ionic hair dryer that save water and energy.
• Flameless
electronic candles for romantic ambience.
• Lights that turn
themselves off after sensors inform them that you've left the room.
The X-room's features are
being tested by actual guests and hotel staff, according to Cihan
Cobanoglu, associate professor of hospitality information technology.
"Our goal is to determine the acceptance levels of these technologies
and the impact they make on guest satisfaction and staff efficiency," he
says.
Source: Cihan Cobanoglu,
University of Delaware, Hotel, Restaurant, and Institutional Management,
14 West Main Street, Raub Hall, Newark, Delaware 19716. Web site
www.cihan.org.
Adorable but annoying: "Clocky,"
the robotic clock, gives a hotel guest one chance to wake up when the
alarm goes off. If the guest presses the "snooze" button, Clocky will
jump off the nightstand and rush around the room looking for a place to
hide. The next time the alarm goes off, the guest has to find the clock
to turn it off.
Source: Cihan Cobanoglu,
University of Delaware, Hotel, Restaurant, and Institutional Management,
14 West Main Street, Raub Hall, Newark, Delaware 19716.
Web site .
Join WFS
for $49 per
year ($20 for students) and receive THE FUTURIST, Futurist Update,
and many other benefits.
Or
order
a print copy of the March-April 2008 issue.
COPYRIGHT © 2008 WORLD FUTURE SOCIETY, 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 450, Bethesda,
Maryland 20814. Tel. 301-656-8274. E-mail info@wfs.org. Web site
http://www.wfs.org. All rights
reserved.