Wireless Internet Launched on Lufthansa FRA - IAD
JpMaxMan writes "On flight LH 418 from Frankfurt, Germany, to Washington, DC, Lufthansa AG began on Wednesday a three-month trial for a new
onboard wireless broadband service
that allows travelers to connect to the Internet some 10,000 meters in the sky."
Is that they go through all this trouble to prevent bombs getting on board, yet they act like the plane will crash if I have my CD player on during take-off. Heck, if it could, and I wanted to crash the plane, I'd just turn it on and leave it out of sight!
It is "free" in that they aren't changing you extra to use it. It's included in the cost of a ticket. Kinda odd that they're bundling this into the price while America West is looking at charging people seperately for meals.
Most people aren't going to download large quantities of mp3's or movies while sitting on a plane. They'll do that before they leave.
The service is intended for websurfing. Think about what percentage of time you spend loading pages vs reading them on your high speed connection. Even with 50 people sharing the connection, only a few will be downloading pages at a time, and the rest will be reading what they've already downloaded.
Jason
ProfQuotes
I wonder how much of the ban on inflight cell phone use is also designed to force people into using (and paying for) air-to-ground phones installed on airliners.
This finally proves the assertion that the reason for the ban on in-flight electronics was to protect Airfone and in-flight movies from competition and had nothing to do with RF interference. Now that the airlines found a way to extract revenue from this, suddenly spread-spectrum RF signals are perfectly safe.
Turn off your cellphone please. And put away that gameboy.
It's hard to feel sorry for the struggling airlines when lie as much as they do.
1m=3.218ft
This is amazing. Think about how far technology has come, that allows you broadband internet access on an airplane 35,000 ft high, travelling between two continents over nothing but water.
:)
Holy crap.
I know the very first thing I would do, without a doubt, is fire up XMMS and listen to Digitally Imported Radio, and smile
Great... I wonder if I can use Voice over IP! Seems like the connection is fast enough on the download side at least.. Although I would hate to see 60 people trying to make a phone call on that 128K uplink.
Besides, what is their uplink? I'd bet it's satellite, which means 600ms+ latency.
This bug allows C++ programmers to access protected and private data that is SUPPOSED to be secured by the C++ virtual machine. Here?s a simple example of a crack that would allow a C++ programmer to access improperly secured data:
PlonkC++ doesn't have a virtual machine--like C, it's designed to run directly on real hardware. Most modern OSes provide memory protection to keep processes from harming each other or the OS, but none of them try to protect programs from themselves.
Go read a couple OS books and stop ranting against Microsoft. Frankly, you don't know what you're talking about.
(Having said that, C and C++ are more or less responsible for the most common class of security bugs, simply because buffer overflows are so easy in both languages. It's not really a flaw as such, though--it's really more of a feature of the mindset and system model behind C, and a sign of shoddy programming. Languages like Java and Perl without easy access to pointers are still prone to other security bugs. You just have to try fractionally harder to produce them.)
Does that imply they'll actually have a place for me to plugin my laptop??? With these fast processors, batteries only last a little over an hour (if even that), and on a long 6-9 hour flight, well, you get the idea...
AND, unless you're first class, there is no way they'll let you plug it in anywhere; unless you go to the rest-room and sit there for an hour to charge the damn battery.
"If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy
Since they have been releasing all this hype about how wireless is a security threat as a terrorist tool, now they are putting it on aircraft. Well,if they are using wireless to hide their identity, at least we have the subjects narrowed down to being on a particular aircraft. They'll only have to weed through a couple hundred passangers to find the culprets.
Mine means my own, but how can this be if I owe for it?