Cruise ship ID card

A cruise ship ID card is a plastic card the size of a credit card that serves several functions for passengers on a cruise ship. Cruise ship ID cards are scanned at the entrances to the ship and at various points throughout the ship, either via magnetic strip, RFID readers or bar code in order to identify the passenger, allow entry to and exit off the ship, allow entry into certain areas of the ship, including the passenger's cabin, bill purchases to the passenger, and various other functions.

Information printed on card

The information printed on the ship card may include:

  • Name of cruise company
  • Name of ship
  • Dates of voyage
  • Name of passenger
  • Dining assignment
  • Muster station

It is now rare for a picture of the passenger to be displayed on the card, but it is frequently scanned in the presence of a computer that will display a picture of the passenger on the screen.

Functions

Functions of a ship card may include:

  • Access to ship (boarding and disembarkation at ports) - required by security at many ports to enter port, and required to exit ship[1]
  • Cabin door key
  • Onboard charge account - since most cruise lines use a cashless system on board, the card is used to make purchases on the ship that are billed to the passenger at the end of the voyage
  • Basic passenger information
gollark: You didn't. Most GTechâ„¢ facilities have electromagnetism disabled, for safety.
gollark: Fill all reality with infinitesimally sized capacitors.
gollark: Store charge, probably.
gollark: What a bad diode.
gollark: Your diode *isn't* digitally controllable?

References

  1. Dowling, R.K. (2006). Cruise Ship Tourism. CABI. p. 429. ISBN 9781845930493. Retrieved 2015-04-01.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.