
Lured by e-ticketing and Near Field Communications…
By Andy McCue
Published: 13 April 2005 15:45 BST
The IT director of Virgin Trains has left to take up a position focusing on the development of an e-ticketing system for the UK transport industry at IT services company Atos Origin.
Jeremy Acklam started as e-ticketing solutions manager at Atos Origin this week after eight years at Virgin Trains.
Initially, Acklam will be working on bids and projects for various regional mobile and smartcard ticketing systems, but of longer-term interest is a technology called Near Field Communication (NFC).
NFC is an authentication mechanism that sets up a wireless connection so that information – such as an e-ticket - can be transmitted to and read on a mobile handset.
"That technology has yet to come to fruition, but it is being trialled in Germany on a rail line from Hanover to Frankfurt. NFC begins to address a big issue for customers who can't read ticketing information on existing smartcards," said Acklam.
He said it will take some time for NFC to roll through into mobile phones in the UK, but said Atos Origin may look at an NFC e-ticketing trial in the transport sector in the near future.
Acklam, who is also a member of silicon.com's CIO Jury user panel, said he took the decision to leave Virgin Trains having overseen the successful end to a six-year project to completely revamp the rail operator's systems.
Lead QA / Tester - Computer Futures Testing team are seeking a Lead Test Analyst to join a leading Transport company based in Surrey. Essential ...
Testing / QA / Automation / Manual and experienced QA Test Engineer to join a leading transport company based in central London. Previous experience ...
Transport Manager Midlands National Distribution Company 40,000 - 45,000 A fantastic opportunity has arisen in the midlands for a national ...
CIO Agenda 2008
The exclusive silicon.com CIO Agenda 2008 survey looks at the CIO's tech shopping list for the year, examines whether IT budgets are rising or falling and reveals what the pain points are for tech chiefs this year. Find out more in our latest special report.
Stories from the web...
Copyright ©1995-2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. Top of page
David Tebbutt Cloud computing: Silver lining… …or just marketing fog?
Steve Ranger Editor's Blog: The race to get the Olympic tech ready They're under starter's orders...