>
Nancy Pelosi has officially announced her RETIREMENT at the end of her term, January 3, 2027.
Omeed Malik: The Technocrat Muslim Billionaire Inside MAGA
Democrat-led government shutdown is now causing flight delays, threatening air traffic control,...
HUGE 32kWh LiFePO4 DIY Battery w/ 628Ah Cells! 90 Minute Build
What Has Bitcoin Become 17 Years After Satoshi Nakamoto Published The Whitepaper?
Japan just injected artificial blood into a human. No blood type needed. No refrigeration.
The 6 Best LLM Tools To Run Models Locally
Testing My First Sodium-Ion Solar Battery
A man once paralyzed from the waist down now stands on his own, not with machines or wires,...
Review: Thumb-sized thermal camera turns your phone into a smart tool
Army To Bring Nuclear Microreactors To Its Bases By 2028
Nissan Says It's On Track For Solid-State Batteries That Double EV Range By 2028

(Natural News) Airport security in most countries is already tight enough as it is, with multiple points of inspection often present beginning from the arrival area going inward. But there are some who think that security efforts can be increased even further. In Dubai, a new experimental robot is being tested, and its sole purpose is to find and catch suspicious or wanted individuals.
Indeed, a robot that is said to have the ability to detect and also report any and all suspicious people will be deployed at Dubai airports very soon. While unprecedented, this initiative is already in its initial stages, with the implementation of the new robot currently undergoing a pilot phase. It is said that the robot will be placed mainly at the arrival section of the airport, and when you think about it, that's about the best place that it could be positioned in.
According to Khalid Al Zarooni, an innovation specialist at the Dubai Custom's Innovation Center, this suspicious-people-targeting robot could be their best creation yet. "This is an android. It still hasn't been implemented fully, but it has gone through a piloting phase around the airports," he explained. "It's probably going to be our best innovation, when it gets implemented in full."
Referring to the robot's special abilities, Al Zarooni said that it makes full use of several built-in sensors and scanners to "read" people going through the airport. In particular, he refers to the "brain" as the source of most of its abilities. "The brain in the android has so many features and tools connected into it, such as facial recognition, X-ray scanning and thermal vision," he said. "What it does is that it gathers data from these features and compiles it into a threat assessment and then it gives alerts to the control room."
The existence of such a robot in the arrival section of an airport could drastically cut down the time it takes to catch dangerous criminals once they land in designated countries. And even when the robot can't detect any suspicious individuals, it can still make itself useful. It does this by performing one other task besides its main one, and that is to act as a greeter to any and all travelers coming through the airport.
The android that can detect and report suspicious people wasn't the only one showcased coming soon to Dubai airports. Al Zarooni also talked about a smart vehicle that's meant to act as a mobile inspection unit. It is said that the purpose of this one is to "clear custom declarations and assist people with special needs." It could prove useful to speed up the process of getting through the airport for certain types of individuals. (Related: "Excuse me, are you a robot in the Surveillance State?")