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I wouldn't expect anything less.oz_mark said:I fear, though, that each country will require its own 'special feature' to allw them to be used!
simongr said:I just wonder how laptops become more dangerous just before the laptop out of the bag rule came in. I think it was brought in around the same time that knives/sharps were banned - rules themselves that are being slightly relaxed.
simongr,simongr said:Given that the requirement to remove the laptop is already airport/country specific along wit the liquids bans etc. I have no expectation that this will be other than a waste of time.
I just wonder how laptops become more dangerous just before the laptop out of the bag rule came in. I think it was brought in around the same time that knives/sharps were banned - rules themselves that are being slightly relaxed.
This is the same vein as introducing ridiculous bans to be seen to be improving security - this is doing something to be seen to reduce the burden. I wonder if any of the head honchos at the TSA have shares in Targus....
The laptop is the least of my problems after shoes (sometimes not all times), liquids, belts, coins, pens - habe your BP with not in your jacket pocket...
And all those people with their $500 Tumi laptop bags are sure to dump them for this....
oz_mark said:Would have been the same time, given that the alleged problem is that by leaving the laptop in the bag can hide other things such as knives.
straitman said:simongr,
Good to see that you have such a positive attitude to an attempt, however misguided, to make things work a little better.
simongr,simongr said:Seems strange that if I agree with a corporation I am an apologist and if I disagree with teh TSA I am negative - can't win at the moment..
When I travel with a laptop (or two) I generally have lots of cables, spare batteries, external HDD, etc. After removing the laptop for screening I then chuck anything I'm carrying on my person into the laptop bag. Often I'm through the WTMD while they've stopped the conveyor and still looking at the bag. Personally it often looks like the makings of a bomb to me on the screen but I'm sure they know what they're doing because I never get pulled aside domestically (except for residue testing). In comparison the laptop itself looks positively benign.straitman said:Maybe I'm just pragmatic as I see that there are positives and negatives in most situations. I see this one as an admission that the current laptop rules are not achieving anything realistic and so it is a first small step back toward some equilibrium.
this is also my experience. Last time through KUL I was screened once just after immigration processing with no issues, and then again at the gate (as is usual process at KUL) and the screener wanted to visually inspect all the cables I had in my bag.rwatts said:When I travel with a laptop (or two) I generally have lots of cables, spare batteries, external HDD, etc. After removing the laptop for screening I then chuck anything I'm carrying on my person into the laptop bag. Often I'm through the WTMD while they've stopped the conveyor and still looking at the bag. Personally it often looks like the makings of a bomb to me on the screen but I'm sure they know what they're doing because I never get pulled aside domestically (except for residue testing). In comparison the laptop itself looks positively benign..
Richard.At Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion Airport -- where security measures are perhaps the tightest in the world -- you do not have to remove your laptop computer. And get this -- you also don't have to remove liquids or your shoes. You do have to remove your coat and the usual loose change, keys, etc.
AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements
Thanks for that - I am still seeing no real benefit. Now instead of removing the laptop I have to open the bag and remember to pack everything else outside of the laptop only section.
New Protocol for Laptops
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Good news for road warriors. As of this past Saturday (Aug. 16), you no longer had to remove your laptop from its bag when going through airport security. But you probably had to invest in a new bag to meet the requirements.
In order to be considered checkpoint friendly, the bag needs:
* A designated laptop-only section.
* The laptop-only section to completely unfold to lay flat on the X-ray belt.
* No metal snaps, zippers or buckles inside, underneath or on top of the laptop-only section.
* No pockets on the inside or outside of the laptop-only section.
* Nothing packed in the laptop-only section except the laptop.
The TSA is not endorsing any particular manufacturer, saying it expects the majority of the new bags that meet the standards to be available for purchase soon. One company, Pathfinder Luggage, is taking preorders. There are a few bags currently on the market that meet the standards, according to the TSA, including sleeve-like carrying cases without pockets or zippers. Basically, the bags "must provide a clear and unobstructed X-ray image of the laptop."