In-flight Broadband Internet Access Trial's Success
flash_cube writes "Boeing Co.'s 'Connexion' business unit finally demoed its in-flight WiFi (802.11b) service this weekend ... even as (noted in this previous /. article) struggling U.S. carriers pull out of the joint venture. Still Boeing promises availability on other airlines in 'early 2003.'"
Great! Now my hotmail spam can reach me ANYWHERE!
Several carriers are removing / cutting off in-flight phone service. The systems are expensive, very few people use it, so it was a money loser. Having used it once or twice, I can also tell you that you can barely have a conversation over the noise of the engines.
During boom times, airlines love to add all sorts of bells and whistles, just to have superior service. Then, at every downturn, they rip out the stuff that doesn't make them any money.
Now is certainly not the time to put WiFi in planes.
The question remains: Why are cellphones forbidden while WiFi is obviously allowed in planes? Don't we all remember the englishman that got jailed for using his cell?
I remember trying to send a few e-mails from the in-seat phone on a plane once (it was a long trip, from Toronto to Vancouver, a few years ago, and I was bored). The message took forever to send, the connection was so slow, and it was such a pain to set up. And the phone bill was huge at the end of it! I remember writing that it was costing me more per minute to send this e-mail message than it was to talk on one of those "Telephone Psychic" lines.
This sounds like a great idea... I'd love ot try it. This sure would make flights (especially long flights) more productive for me and less boring.
These are the good old days you'll be telling your children about. Make them worthwhile.
you could join the half-mile high club. ;)
From Reuters:
;)
Connexion executives said data transmission speeds for the demo should be about five megabits per second coming into the plane and 128 thousand bits per second when sending data off the plane. The speed, they said, was similar to digital subscriber line service people have at home, but some users complained it seemed slower.
My guess is that it's not slower, but has more lag (through a satelite link... bound to be laggy). If that is the case it's fine for browsing, but no good for games...
Not that it matters, but how cool would it be to play Quake 10 Km up in the air?
.: Max Romantschuk
RIAA has the right to shot down planes whose internet connection is used to download copyrighted music!
IM..(ever-so)..HO the airlines would be better served by extending the availability of in-seat power sockets.
...and now that I've got that off my chest, I feel better now :)
It would be nice to be able to work/surf/watch-DVDs on a long-haul flight without having to carry your body-weight in spare batteries.
Think about it this way. In order to cover an entire airplane, you'll need one or two access points for 802.11b access. In order for ethernet to work, you'd have to put jacks on every seat, which may mean replacing the entire seat. So, the difference is a couple of hundred bucks for two APs, or replacing every seat in the plane with seats with ethernet jacks.
What will be really funny is the new type of black hat hacker who, from the comfort of a transatlantic flight, not only figure out how to get the connection for free, but exploit international waters...
We'll have a new breed of webpage defacements that will come from groups with names like j4l, s4s, 44 and b031ng.
great
-- -=innocent ramblings from the mind of an insomniatic programmer=-
So, if I connect using my Airport equipped iBook, and share that connection with my friend back in coach who has a similar setup, we can split the cost, etc.
All it takes is one wisegeek per flight, and they'll find less paying customers than they expected. Oh well, nice while it lasted. My big worry is finding a way to keep running for those 12 hr. flights back to Asia.
On an airliner WiFi wins over wired because:
Wires are heavy the few hundred meters of cable required hubs etc would weigh much more than a WiFi rig, every extra kilo costs fuel every time the plane flys. After fitting the WiFi hubs only users add weight (ie the adaptor cards)
WiFi is cheap to fit, just lob the boxes in and configure, wired installation would need to be done during a big refit and would require skilled fitters to string the wires (more cost!)
WiFi is cheap to remove (you really don't want deadweight on a airliner!)
I recall hearing that an 'airline' was playing with fuel numbers and found that if the crew did not wear shoes on their flights they could save $200,000/year in fuel, can anyone provide a source for that?
Sexxxychica: hey cutie wanna cyber?
:-(
BigMan69 I'm horny as hell and I'd love to get freaky with you but I'm on a flight right now
Sexxxychica: really? me too! I'm flying to Sydney. you?
BigMan69 Wow I'm on Qantas flight 609 from Honolulu to Sydney.
Sexxxychica: No joke? I'm in seat 15B! where are you??
Sexxxychica: You still there?
Previous message was not received by BigMan69 because of error: User BigMan69 is not available.
Airline Tickets: $800
In-Flight WiFi : $30
Being trapped on a long-ass flight sitting next to a man who knows you were pretending to be a woman and whom you just tried to have cybersex with: Priceless