Launches
Certification
Program
Publishes Two
White Papers
Defining the
Guest Room of
the Future
Engages 20+
Leading Tech
Vendors in Open
Interoperability
Demos
LOS ANGELES
(June 21, 2005)
-- Hotel
Technology Next
Generation
(HTNG), which
was founded
three years ago
at HITEC 2002 in
Chicago,
celebrated its
third
anniversary this
week, announcing
significant
progress towards
its objectives
of improving
systems
interoperability
in the
hospitality
industry.
·
Today, HTNG
launches the
first-ever
branding and
certification
program for
hotel
technology, with
the completion
of its
Certification
Policy.
Developed by
HTNG in
association with
The Open Group,
this policy,
together with
the
Certification
Agreement and
Trademark
License
Agreement, will
enable
technology
vendors to
certify their
products to
specifications
approved by HTNG
workgroups.
·
Last week,
HTNG’s In-Room
Technology
Workgroup
published two
ground-breaking
White Papers,
representing
hundreds of
hours of effort
by some of the
best technology
management,
engineering, and
marketing
research talent
in the
industry. One
White Paper
defines the
changing needs
of guests, and
what hotels can
do to meet their
technology needs
more
effectively.
The other
proposes a set
of reference
infrastructures
for hotel
network
deployments,
designed to help
hotels achieve
the cost,
performance, and
integration
benefits that
other industries
have achieved by
migrating to
converged
IP-based
networks.
·
Twenty-plus
technology
vendors have
worked together
in various
combinations to
produce live
interoperability
demonstrations
based on open
specifications
at HITEC 2005.
These include
the first-ever
implementation
by competing
companies of a
single, common
version of the
OpenTravel
Alliance™ (OTA)
specification; a
unified guest
messaging
environment for
voice messages,
faxes, and text
messages that is
coordinated
across PMS,
telephone
system, and
television;
remote
monitoring and
instrumentation
of multiple
systems from a
common console;
integration of
building and
room controls
with guest
devices; and an
automated
version of the
“doorknob
breakfast card”
that integrates
an IP phone with
the
Point-of-Sale
and Property
Management
Systems. These
and many other
examples are on
display at the
HTNG booth #1152
at the HITEC
show in Los
Angeles.
HTNG recorded
numerous other
achievements
over the past
year, including:
·
The launch of
two new
workgroups
focusing on
Distribution and
In-Room
Technology
·
Growth from 35
members a year
ago to 210
today, including
66 major
technology
vendors
exhibiting at
HITEC 2005, and
nearly as many
hotel companies
·
Successful
recruitment of
new hotel CIOs
and CTOs to the
Board of
Directors, which
now includes
representation
of all primary
market segments,
with almost half
the directors
from outside the
United States
·
Creation of a
Special Interest
Group that will
focus on systems
integration in
the Gaming
sector of the
hospitality
industry
·
Establishment of
working
relationships
with other
industry
standards and
specifications
bodies,
including
OpenTravel
Alliance (OTA),
the Convention
Industry
Council’s
Accepted
Practices
Exchange (APEX),
the Open
Building
Information
Exchange (oBIX),
and the Gaming
Standards
Association
(GSA).
Branding and
Certification
Program
The HTNG
Branding and
Certification
Program is
formally
launched at
HITEC 2005 with
the publication
of the HTNG
Certification
Policy. Four
months in the
making, this
document was the
result of a
collaborative
effort between
an HTNG Board
Committee and
The Open Group (www.opengroup.org).
The Open Group
is one of the
world’s leading
practitioners of
certification
programs, and
serves as the
certification
authority for
the Common
Operating
Environment
(COE) Platform,
CORBA®, LDAP,
Linux Standard
Base (LSB™),
POSIX®, UNIX®,
the Wireless
Application
Protocol (WAP),
and numerous
other
specifications
and standards
bodies.
“Certification
and branding
provides
important
benefits to both
buyers and
sellers of
technology,”
said Douglas
Rice, Executive
Director of
HTNG. “The
‘HTNG Certified’
label will
provide
assurance to
buyers that a
particular
technology
product will
deliver a
minimum level of
interoperability
with other
products.”
Through the
certification
process,
technology
vendors can
apply to use
that trademark
for their
products. They
must show that
the products
meet the
specifications
at the outset,
and agree to
quickly rectify
any deficiencies
that appear
later on.
Technology
vendors who
implement open
HTNG
specifications
benefit from
being able to
advertise their
compliance.
Buyers who are
HTNG members
will benefit
from access to
the certified
product
register, which
identifies
precisely which
products,
versions, and
configurations
meet a product
specification,
and which
optional
features of that
specification
they implement.
“Unlike
self-policed
compliance
claims, the
‘HTNG Certified’
label will be
protected by
trademark law,”
says Rice.
“This means that
vendors who
complete the
effort to become
certified can be
confident that
their legitimate
claims of
compliance will
not be lost
among false
claims by
companies that
have not met the
same
requirements.”
The next step in
the process will
be for HTNG
workgroups to
identify the
specifications
that they
believe would
benefit from
certification.
The program is
designed to be
able to
accommodate any
workgroup
specifications,
but there is no
requirement that
every
specification be
submitted to the
certification
process. The
participants in
each workgroup
can determine
which
specifications
would benefit
from
certification.
It is
anticipated that
workgroups will
begin submitting
specifications
to become part
of the
certification
program over the
next few months.
The costs of
certification
will vary
depending on the
specifications
involved, and
the means of
verifying
compliance with
each one.
Initially, HTNG
anticipates that
compliance with
most
specifications
will be based on
self-certification
by the vendor.
Under this
approach,
providers will
need to complete
a certification
checklist and
provide evidence
(such as testing
results) that
their product is
compliant. “We
believe that
this approach is
the right
starting point,
as it minimizes
the costs of
administering
the
certification
program, and
will help keep
certification
fees low” said
Rice. “Our
industry depends
on many small
technology
companies, and
we think it is
critical that
the cost of
certification
not impose a
financial burden
on the industry
innovators. If
third-party
testing programs
prove necessary
for some
specifications,
we can always
implement them
later, on a
selective
basis.”
In-Room
Technology
Workgroup White
Papers
The HTNG In-Room
Technology
Workgroup
released the
first two of a
series of
groundbreaking
White Papers,
representing
hundreds of
hours of
contributions
from some of the
best hotel,
engineering, and
marketing minds
in the
business.
The first White
Paper,
“Convergence:
Hotel Technology
for Today and
Tomorrow,”
addresses the
issue of network
infrastructure
in hotels. For
years, hotels
have been built
with separate
networks to
support
different
applications,
including
in-room
entertainment
systems,
telephony,
high-speed
Internet,
building control
systems, and
administrative
systems. The
hotel CIO/CTO
community has
known for years
that the
redundancy in
cabling is
costly, and that
the historical
approach made it
difficult to get
these different
systems to work
cooperatively.
This White Paper
makes the
business case
for migrating
hotels to a
single converged
network;
identifies the
alternative
infrastructures
that should be
the targets; and
considers the
key applications
that need to
coexist –
entertainment,
Internet access,
telephony, and
room controls.
“If you want to
future-proof
your technology
investments,
this is the one
document you
can't afford not
to read,” said
Nick Price,
Chief Technology
Officer of
Mandarin
Oriental Hotel
Group and
President of
HTNG.
The
Infrastructure
White Paper
reflects design
work from top
engineers at
leading
technology
companies in all
major guest-room
application
areas, as well
as critical
input from
participating
hospitality
companies,
including Ginn
Clubs & Resorts,
The Kor Group,
Mandarin
Oriental,
Marriott
International,
The Peninsula
Group, and Royal
Caribbean. The
paper was
developed by a
team chaired by
Angela Landon of
Cisco Systems;
was edited by
Donald C. Wynes,
PMP, of Lorica
Solutions; and
included
significant
contributions
from engineers
and executives
at Cisco
Systems,
Datanamics, Ginn
Clubs & Resorts,
Heckaman Group,
LodgeNet
Entertainment
Corporation,
Lorica
Solutions, Mitel,
Mandarin
Oriental Hotel
Group, Paradyne,
Royal Caribbean,
and SolutionInc
Limited.
The second White
Paper, “The
Guest of the
Future: In-Room
Technology
Preferences
Today and
Tomorrow”
represents an
amazing view
into the needs
of tomorrow’s
guests, and what
it will take to
satisfy them.
Hotel rooms
being built
today will, over
the course of
their lifetime,
be occupied
mostly by people
who are still
under 30, or
even 20. Their
expectations
will not be the
same as today’s
travelers, and
if the
hospitality
industry is to
succeed at
meeting those
expectations, it
needs to
understand how
the expectations
of younger
generations
differ from
those of older
ones – and how
they are likely
to continue to
evolve over
time.
This White Paper
was authored by
the Center for
Marketing
Effectiveness (CeME),
with significant
input from
executives at
Guest-Tek,
Mandarin
Oriental,
Marriott
International,
Mitel, The
Peninsula Group,
and SolutionInc
Limited.
A third White
Paper, which
covers the need
for and design
for an “all in
one” guestroom
device to
control all
technologies, is
still under
development and
will be
published for
HTNG member
comment in the
near future.
This device,
modeled after
the traditional
cable-TV
“Set-Top Box,”
does not yet
exist in the
marketplace.
Once the design
is complete, the
workgroup will
seek to engage
manufacturers to
create this
“smart”
terminating
point for the IP
network within
the room, which
will allow
coordinated,
guest-centric
control of all
in-room
technologies and
devices.
The full White
Papers are
available online
to HTNG members
at no charge.
They will be
released to the
general public
when the In-Room
Technology
Workgroup
completes its
mission and
ceases to exist
in approximately
12 months.
About Hotel
Technology Next
Generation
The premier
technology
solutions
association in
the hospitality
industry, HTNG
is a
self-funded,
non-profit
organization
with members
from hotel and
hospitality
companies,
technology
vendors to
hospitality, and
other industry
members
including
consultants,
media, and
academic
experts. HTNG's
members
participate in
focused
workgroups to
bring open
solution-sets
addressing
specific
business
problems to the
hospitality
market.
Membership in
HTNG is open to
hotel and
hospitality
companies,
technology
vendors to
hospitality,
consultants,
academics, press
and others.
Currently more
than 200
companies and
individuals from
across this
spectrum are
active HTNG
members.
Workgroup
proceedings,
drafts, and
specifications
are published
for all HTNG
members as soon
as they are
created,
encouraging
rapid and broad
adoption. For
more
information,
visit
www.htng.org.
* * *
Source: Hotel
Technology Next
Generation
Contact: Douglas
Rice
Executive
Director
douglas.rice@htng.org
+1 847 348 1148
+44 207 101 9358