NE:ONE Play

 

NE:ONE Play makes the unintuitive –and soon to be mandatory- data standard in air cargo easy to understand and fun to use. This will save valuable development resources, by speeding up the on-boarding process, making the development for the standard much more efficient. NE:ONE Play will help airlines, airports, forwarders, IT providers, authorities and additional stakeholders, implement ONE Record and get them ready for the future of air cargo.

 

NE:ONE Play began as a winning hackathon project during the 2023 Seeheim Edition of the IATA ONE Record hackathon.
Here is the video of the event:

 

Because of the high interest from the industry, we are currently working on a commercial version of NE:ONE Play that is fully compliant with the latest version of the ONE Record data standard and that has additional features that will make ONE Record experience much easier.

Doing so we are looking for companies and investors interested in licensing or running NE:ONE Play as a platform together with us. To know more about this, feel free to get in touch with any questions you might have (see contact details in the sidebar).

What exactly is NE:ONE Play and how to use it? 

With NE:ONE Play we want to provide an easy-to-use viewer and editor for ONE Record data. As an example, NE:ONE Play is to ONE Record data, what a web browser (like Chrome or Firefox) is to HTML data. In other words, it makes working with ONE Record much user friendly and intuitive.

There are three main scenarios to use NE:ONE Play:

© Fraunhofer IML

Teaching

ONE Record introduces a revolution to the way we exchange data in air cargo. It introduces quite a few new ideas that have so far not been used in the industry. Linked Data, a single source of truth, data ownership, a powerful yet complex data model, in addition to other elements.

Using NE:ONE Play can be a great help in understanding yourself and teaching these principles to others.

 

Development

With a modern API and a powerful data model, ONE Record brings substantial benefits from a development perspective. However, the linked data principle (which consists of providing data through the data owner and then linking it to other parts of the whole shipment data set), can challenge the complete view of a data set, following all the different links, in addition to other relevant elements. This leads to an inefficient use of IT resources and can cause costly bugs in your ONE Record implementation. 

 

Compliance

In the future also authorities, such as customs, will receive their information through ONE Record. For authorities, NE:ONE Play will facilitate the a complete view of the data sets and its different versions through the audit trail. This way they will be able to explore the full history of a data set and will enable them to make better and more informed decisions.

 

If you are interested in this solution or have been inspired to work even on other innovative solutions together with us, please feel free to get in contact.