Last weekend, I went to Six Flags over Texas. They have a program called FastLane, which in theory is similar to FastPass. However, instead of inserting your ticket into the whatchamacallit
and getting a little stub that says your time range to return to the ride, at the front gate, you rent a little electronic gadget, similar to a pager. You then take this pager and hold it in front of a special scanner at the front of the ride, which , then shows the name of the ride and your reservation time, as well as how many are in your party. Then as it gets close to your reservation time, the pager beeps and vibrates. When you get to your reserved ride, you hold the pager up to another scanner at the ride exit, then enter the ride through the exit. You are then ushered to the front of the line, and are next to enjoy the ride, similar to FastPass.
The advantages of this system were that there were no little stubs of paper to keep track of, plus you can reserve times on as many rides as you want. For example, you could reserve a time on all the big name attractions, then the pager would just beep in the order that your reservation time came up. The reservation time is based on the current queue wait. If the wait is 90 minutes, your ressie time will be 90 minutes away. If the queue line is 10 minutes, your ressie time will be 10 minutes away.
The disadvantage was that there was a rental fee: approximately $20 for 2 in our party. (You can have as many as 6 people on one pager. You pay according to how many are in your party.) Another disadvantage was that there was a very short "window of opportunity" for each ride. Where at WDW, I remember getting an hour-long range to return on my FastPass, with the FastLane system at Six Flags, it seemed the range was only 10 minutes or so.
This system must be very new at Six Flags, as there were very few people using them, and we got quite a few angry stares and angry comments as we went ahead of them in line. (But we didn't feel bad at all, as the devices were available for anybody to rent.)
As we were renting the device, I was talking to the woman helping us about WDW's FastPass system, and comparing the two. She said that WDW is planning to implement this very system (meaning the electronic gadgets) in the future.
DH and I were discussing it. If this is true, WDW's guests aren't going to be pleased to have to rent a device to replace the currently 100% free FastPass. Even if they do offer it for free or for a deposit, what's to keep people from swiping them, and thus raising the operation cost of this system?
Does anyone know if this rumor is true?

The advantages of this system were that there were no little stubs of paper to keep track of, plus you can reserve times on as many rides as you want. For example, you could reserve a time on all the big name attractions, then the pager would just beep in the order that your reservation time came up. The reservation time is based on the current queue wait. If the wait is 90 minutes, your ressie time will be 90 minutes away. If the queue line is 10 minutes, your ressie time will be 10 minutes away.
The disadvantage was that there was a rental fee: approximately $20 for 2 in our party. (You can have as many as 6 people on one pager. You pay according to how many are in your party.) Another disadvantage was that there was a very short "window of opportunity" for each ride. Where at WDW, I remember getting an hour-long range to return on my FastPass, with the FastLane system at Six Flags, it seemed the range was only 10 minutes or so.
This system must be very new at Six Flags, as there were very few people using them, and we got quite a few angry stares and angry comments as we went ahead of them in line. (But we didn't feel bad at all, as the devices were available for anybody to rent.)
As we were renting the device, I was talking to the woman helping us about WDW's FastPass system, and comparing the two. She said that WDW is planning to implement this very system (meaning the electronic gadgets) in the future.
DH and I were discussing it. If this is true, WDW's guests aren't going to be pleased to have to rent a device to replace the currently 100% free FastPass. Even if they do offer it for free or for a deposit, what's to keep people from swiping them, and thus raising the operation cost of this system?
Does anyone know if this rumor is true?