Smartphones and sensors could spell an end to ticket lines at transport hubs

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Simon Dawson | Bloomberg | Getty Images Hitachi Rail is developing technology that may remove the need for ticket barriers at train stations. The company hopes that the prototype tech, which


is at the testing stage, could use sensors on a train to detect an app on passengers' phones that would act as a ticket. Depending on what stops they get on and off at, travelers would


be automatically charged a fare without needing to take their phone out of their bag or pocket. In an announcement Monday, Hitachi Rail said this system would signal an end to lines at


barriers and ticket machines. The firm added that a "rigorous" testing program would take place with Italian public transport company Trenito Transporti. It also hopes to introduce


the technology to the U.K.'s bus, tram and train networks. "We are now beginning to test this technology and looking at the possibility of one app working across large stretches


of a country," Karen Boswell, the managing director of Hitachi Rail, said in a statement. "For example, a passenger could use the app to take a bus in their local town and a train


elsewhere in the country all in one day," Boswell explained. The last few years have seen a range of technologies change the way passengers pay to use public transport. In London, for


example, people can pay for journeys on the city's tube and overground network using paper tickets, contactless cards and their smartphone.