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Internet Access 10 Kilometers High Up In The Air

Marton writes "Lufthansa started rolling out their Flynet service in 2004. It is now available on several long-haul flights such as 411D - the one I'm sitting on right now. It is not cheap ($30 for the duration of a flight) nor is it very fast (satellite-based technology can't deliver the snappy response you are used to on the ground) but it is really, really nice. It's great to be able to check my email, catch up with some work, or just surf the web - airplane time used to be about napping, paperbacks or crappy movies. Now if only they'd let me have a cigarette I could actually be productive too. " Marton also gave us a traceroute which is attached... I'm going to Tokyo in May and crying that Northwest won't have this.

Here's a traceroute from my laptop which is currently on an A-340 10,000 meters up in the air, doing about 800 kilometers per hour, somewhere over the Atlantic bound for Munich.


C:\Documents and Settings\Marton>tracert www.slashdot.org

Tracing route to www.slashdot.org [66.35.250.151]
over a maximum of 30 hops:

1 2 ms 3 ms 2 ms 172.16.64.1
2 2 ms 2 ms 2 ms cbb-cds-psn.by.boeing [172.16.0.18]
3 3 ms 4 ms 2 ms sbs.by.boeing [172.31.0.1]
4 * * * Request timed out.
5 568 ms 626 ms 576 ms 10.8.20.38
6 703 ms 567 ms 583 ms ltn02r03-vlan25.connexionbyboeing.net [10.8.20.2]
7 580 ms 705 ms 582 ms ltn02r21-fa2-9.connexionbyboeing.net [10.8.16.25]
8 627 ms 582 ms 632 ms 10.8.16.33
9 579 ms 581 ms 581 ms ltn02r01-fa3-3.connexionbyboeing.net [10.8.16.130]
10 619 ms 582 ms 582 ms ltn02r02-fa3-3.connexionbyboeing.net [10.8.16.131]
11 581 ms 582 ms 665 ms 12.125.155.5
12 655 ms 912 ms 1072 ms gbr1-a31s1.dvmco.ip.att.net [12.127.4.134]
13 1144 ms 1612 ms 1939 ms gbr1-p60.la2ca.ip.att.net [12.122.1.29]
14 1500 ms 712 ms 580 ms tbr2-p013301.sffca.ip.att.net [12.122.12.133]
15 613 ms 579 ms 582 ms 12.122.80.57
16 589 ms 608 ms 790 ms dcr1-so-3-0-0.sanfranciscosfo.savvis.net [192.205.32.110]
17 588 ms 605 ms 582 ms dcr2-loopback.SanFranciscosfo.savvis.net [206.24.210.100]
18 609 ms 1774 ms 1079 ms bhr1-pos-0-0.SantaClarasc8.savvis.net [208.172.156.198]
19 610 ms 968 ms 1108 ms csr1-ve243.SantaClarasc8.savvis.net [66.35.194.50]
20 1109 ms 886 ms 998 ms 66.35.212.174
21 630 ms 860 ms 994 ms star.slashdot.org [66.35.250.151]

Trace complete.

69 of 366 comments (clear)

  1. NICE!! by rkv · · Score: 2, Insightful

    if they made it a bit cheaper it would be better though?

    1. Re:NICE!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The typical price of the ticket is $600 economy to $3000 business... does another $30 for internet access really matter.

    2. Re:NICE!! by magarity · · Score: 5, Informative

      if they made it a bit cheaper it would be better though?

      They have to make a trade off between making it so more people can afford it versus the relatively slow connection. If you're going to pay any noticable amount for such a small time frame as a single flight then you want to get your money's worth. If too many people use it then it slows to a crawl. Then everyone complains. Keeping the price high is a way of ensuring there is a reasonable amount of bandwidth to the few who do pay.

    3. Re:NICE!! by mqx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      if they made it a bit cheaper it would be better though?

      Sure, and it be better if high-end computing servers were cheaper too, but really: a global plane based relatively high speed internetwork is not cheap to build and run: we're talking about fitting equipment into planes, trials and testing, satellite bandwidth, the cost of satellite services, etc. This is not inexpensive.

      I actually think $30 is not too bad for what you're getting. It's not for everyone, but it's within the reach of many people, considering many of us think nothing about easily spending $30 on a restaurant meal.

      Not only this, but international airlines are not actually loaded with revenue that they could absorb the cost of this service into existing price you pay, and really, I wouldn't want my mother (a non internet user) to pay higher trans-atlantic fares so that she can subsidise web browsers: user pays!

      I'm sure we'll see the service expand and improve in the future, but for now, it's a fairly decent start. I'm not on a 6 figure salary, yet I'd have no problems paying for this service on the 2-3 12+ hour flights I make per year.

    4. Re:NICE!! by rkv · · Score: 3, Insightful

      well if the mobile phone companies can convince the FCC that mobile phones can be used in the air then this 30$ service would'nt be necessary as high speed broadband connection would be available :D. so ya i still think its too much.

    5. Re:NICE!! by Oopsz · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You think your mobile will work over the north atlantic? and what are your data roaming charges going to be in munich/montreal/melbourne?

    6. Re:NICE!! by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      For someone who just wants to dick around surfing the web, it's an expensive optional luxury. It's not insanely exhorbitant, but someone who's just bored might think twice. If they're on a tight budget, they won't even seriously consider it. It's not like it's that hard to wait ten to fifteen hours to get back online (for most people =)). It's not like you'll be able to play WoW or HL2 anyway, with that kind of latency.

      For someone who needs internet access to work while they're inflight, it's invaluable, and pays for itself a few times over (at least).

      Eventually the price might come down enough for one to use this service recreationally without wincing at the price. However, satellites are expensive and satellite time is expensive. So you're looking at either cheap ubiquitous satellites at some time in the future, or some scheme to squeeze more bandwith out of a scarce resource.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    7. Re:NICE!! by XFilesFMDS1013 · · Score: 2, Funny

      considering many of us think nothing about easily spending $30 on a restaurant meal.

      Okay, only someone on /. would connect the ability to access to web and eating, together, both as things that "must be done".

    8. Re:NICE!! by KanSer · · Score: 4, Interesting

      30$ is not bad for a trans-atlantic hop. I've done San fran to Frankfurt on Lufthansa many many times, and while the service is impeccable, those 10 hours sure would go easier with a net connection.

      For any of Lufthansa's long haul flights 30$ is very reasonable. The next logical step would be to wire up every seat with an ethernet port (which I imagine this service provides) and set up a LAN. Think about the new A380s, formerly the A3XX or the 400-800 seat true double decker planes.

      800 people, lets say San Fran to Frankfurt or Munich, what do you think the odds are that at least 20 people have a laptop with some games. Hello, wouldn't fragging at 35,000 feet be awesome? Even better if the plane hosted old-school games (doom 2, quake 1) so people wouldn't need to all have it installed.

      --
      • MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward Wednesday April 20, @4:20
  2. If you need slashdot on a plane... by PyWiz · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...you might be addicted.

    --
    -py
    1. Re:If you need slashdot on a plane... by Infirmo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The worst thing about the internet is text formatting?

      Hmmm... I would have thought the worst things were the poorly informed opinions most people have, their deadly committment to those poorly informed opinions, and the average inability to spell common words.

      But I will forget all about those, now that I have heard the truth. It's the text formatting.

  3. Will $30 more also get you smoking rights? by flowerp · · Score: 3, Funny

    If cou can pay $30 for Internet, try paying $30 for smoking. Let's see how far that will get you.

    --
    --- Eat my sig.
    1. Re:Will $30 more also get you smoking rights? by magarity · · Score: 2, Funny

      Because it is a flame on an airplane. See the problem?

      Plenty of people smoked like chimneys from the days of the Ford Tri-Motor to the day before the bans went into effect. I don't think there are any cases of planes crashing or otherwise coming to harm because of cigarettes. It's just a case of a confined area with nowhere for the smoke to go except in everyone else's nose. As a non-smoker, I have to say that if smokers were willing to wear an enclosed helmet to smoke on planes, I'd be all in favor of it. Mainly for the comic relief value, but hey...

    2. Re:Will $30 more also get you smoking rights? by Richard_at_work · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I dont think the safety rules are over the top. You are at 37,000 feet, if you have any sort of emergancy at that altitude its going to take you time to get on the ground, and then evacuate the aircraft, so its a case of limit dangers to only those necessary. Why endanger the aircraft needlessly jsut to pander to someones personal addiction, because thats what it is?

    3. Re:Will $30 more also get you smoking rights? by anonicon · · Score: 3, Funny

      "2) It's FEDERAL LAW. No one smokes on an airplane, period. Are they supposed to just throw away the law because some addicted nut pulls out a helmet?"

      Depends. Are we talking about the Lesser Helmet of +5 Charisma for 8,000GP, or the Greater Helmet of +10 Charisma for 24,000GP?

      >;-)

    4. Re:Will $30 more also get you smoking rights? by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      i think its more likely that a dodgy phone battery or something like that could cause a dangerous fire, if you drop a cigarette on your clothes, it takes a while to burn a hole - if you didn't notice it before, youve noticed it now because your now in pain. Unless your wearing one of those 80's shell suits, you'l be fine and so will everybody else (80's shell suits are illegal to sell in the uk now because theyre a fire hazard.

      A small fire would be very easy to put out anyway, im sure the trolly dollies are trained to use a fire extinguisher. how many times (when smoking used to be allowed on planes) did people used to set fire to things with cigarettes?

      i would pay an extra 10% of the price of my ticket to sit in a smoking area because im scared of flying, it'd help calm me down. (i flew home from spain on 11-sept 2004, i was sure i was going to die, even though there was very little chance)

    5. Re:Will $30 more also get you smoking rights? by EpsCylonB · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A small fire would be very easy to put out anyway, im sure the trolly dollies are trained to use a fire extinguisher. how many times (when smoking used to be allowed on planes) did people used to set fire to things with cigarettes?

      I don't know about planes but cigarettes that aren't extinguished properly is one of the biggest causes of house fires.

    6. Re:Will $30 more also get you smoking rights? by JonyEpsilon · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'm confused. Are you talking about smoking or slashdot ?

    7. Re:Will $30 more also get you smoking rights? by Vlad_the_Inhaler · · Score: 2, Funny

      ive never died from dropping a fag on my shirt.

      Was that your GNAA post?

      --
      Mielipiteet omiani - Opinions personal, facts suspect.
    8. Re:Will $30 more also get you smoking rights? by wasted · · Score: 4, Informative

      ...I don't think there are any cases of planes crashing or otherwise coming to harm because of cigarettes.

      I think (not totally sure) that the cause of the lavatory fire in Air Canada 797 on June 2, 1983, could have been a cigarette.

      I couldn't find a good linkable reference, but I think the 25 fatalities on an Ilyushin 18B at Guangzhou-Baiyun airport in 1982 was also caused by a fire started by a cigarette.

      Another example (July 11th, 1973) can be found here.

    9. Re:Will $30 more also get you smoking rights? by LnxAddct · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You have a problem and you need help. You are trying to justify smoking on a plane. You can't go a few hours without a smoke? People are doing a favor for your life, how many tmes has it been proven that smoking kills you, and kills you quickly. I'm so glad my city is banning smoking, you people contribute nothing but ill effects to the rest of society. Take a hint and try to quit, its a dirty disgusting habit that shortens your life. It doesn't even calm you until you've become addicted to it. Stop trying to jsutify your actions and instead correct them. Don't force your smoke on other passengers or employees of the airport. If you want to kill yourself, confine it to your house.
      Regards,
      Steve

    10. Re:Will $30 more also get you smoking rights? by Jeremi · · Score: 2, Funny
      ive never died from dropping a fag on my shirt.


      I did, once. Fortunately they offer 20,000,000 hours of free dial-up AOL access here in hell.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    11. Re:Will $30 more also get you smoking rights? by rocketfairy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wow, smokers contribute nothing to society? Take that, Winston Churchill!

    12. Re:Will $30 more also get you smoking rights? by MerryGoByeBye · · Score: 2, Funny

      Only on Slashdot can the previous post get modded "interesting". Funny on its own, of course, but on the other hand tragic, as it shows just how little the mods pay attention.

    13. Re:Will $30 more also get you smoking rights? by LnxAddct · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How about you're in severe denial. I can't believe you would even argue a point like that, are you nuts? Its been proven time over time again that the things you inhale are the same chemicals responsible for many forms of cancer. The main ingredient in many rat poisons is used in cigarettes.

      The following isn't necessearily directed at you, but just to smokers in general: Please stop living in denial, I'm trying to save your life here. I'm not being a dick or telling you how to live, I've just seen way too many people die from smoking and unfortunately many were very close to me. I've never met you and never will but I do care about your life. Take good advice when you hear it, you won't regret quitting, but you will regret continuing.
      Regards,
      Steve

    14. Re:Will $30 more also get you smoking rights? by domc · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Most of the dangers of smoking come from smoking low-quality, chemical-laden cigatettes (like Marlboro, Camel, etc). The chemical process used to make light cigs are the origin of the huge lists of chemicals contained in cigarettes.

      Also, smoking too much (more than a pack a day) is bad for you. I believe that over-smoking is directly related to 'light' cigarettes. You'll find that most two-pack-a-day smokers are smoking lights. Constant nicotine craving because the dose is too low.

      I only smoke high-quality tobacco, with no gunpowder in the papers, with no filters (what do they have to put in cotton to make it not burn?), and I roll my own. I believe that this practice is much safer than smoking mass-produced cigarettes. In fact, if I have to smoke commercial cigs, I find that I begin to feel ill after about two packs (4 days).

      I always tell other smokers to take some tobacco out of their cigarette, and eat it. They are usually disgusted by the nasty chemical taste. Then, I give them some of my tobacco to eat, and they always respond with something like "This tastes good enough to put on top of a salad". Then I tell them that this good-enough-to-eat tobacco costs an order of magnitude less than what they are paying for their nasty cigs.

      So, in my belief, it is not the act of smoking that is dangerous, it is the act of smoking low-quality, chemical-laden cigarettes. Kind of like eating McDonalds vs. a nice buffalo burger. It always pays to go with the highest quality option. And, in this case, the highest quality option is also the cheapest (much like Open Source).

      My motto is: If you wouldn't want to eat it, why would you want to smoke it!

      Dom

  4. tcptraceroute by Barbarian · · Score: 2, Informative

    Remember that some providers give UDP packets low priority. I'd be more impressed if he'd run tcptraceroute.

  5. Boeing technology by thammoud · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A link to the real provider to this technology.
    http://www.connexionbyboeing.com/

    1. Re:Boeing technology by Abstract_Me · · Score: 4, Funny

      The article says its slow and expensive but the connexionbyboeing website advertises it being fast and cheap! which one do i beleive?!

    2. Re:Boeing technology by magarity · · Score: 4, Funny

      I find it quite amusing that Connexion by Boeing is being used on an Airbus.

    3. Re:Boeing technology by MathFox · · Score: 4, Informative
      If you've read the connexionbyboeing website a bit better: The plane has an 1 Mbit connection (or better). Unfortunately the data is routed via a satellite, so the link has pretty high latency.

      One of my friends has downloaded a Knoppix CD on one of his transatlantic flights.

      --
      extern warranty;
      main()
      {
      (void)warranty;
      }
    4. Re:Boeing technology by Oopsz · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why? Boeing will fit their addons to a bombardier business jet if you pay them to. Airplanes are just too darn expensive for boeing to be able to use internet access as leverage.

  6. Is $30 really that bad? by Demonspawn · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I havn't flown in a LONG time, so I don't know what the price would be for a long flight like the ones that have this service. I realize compared to the prices of ground service it's horably expensive (vs. a month long contract), but thinking of it as an 'add on' to the ticket, what percentage of the ticket cost is it? If you are dealing with a $300 ticket, then it's only a 10% rider.

    Of course, if you are taking one of those $59 flights I see advertised, you'd be thinking the cost is insane.

  7. Mile High Club? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    For all the slashdot geeks flying on Lufthansa, this also gives you the opportunity to join the mile high club - solo!

  8. VoIP by NetStatic · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It would be interesting, once the latency goes down a bit, if you could run VoIP over the connection, bringing cheap(er) phone services. Those Verizon Airphones are really expensive.

    --
    sig on vacation
    1. Re:VoIP by melonman · · Score: 3, Funny

      once the latency goes down a bit

      What, when the speed of light increases a bit? I'm typing this on a terrestial satellite connection, and that's about the latency you get.

      You can do VoIP over this sort of connection, you just have to get used to the fact that there's about a second's lag, and, if you can hear yourself on the remote speakers, a 2-second echo.

      Here's part of my traceroute...

      3 firewall (192.168.1.1) 3.067 ms 7.553 ms 12.684 ms
      4 172.31.254.253 (172.31.254.253) 4.062 ms 5.199 ms 6.160 ms
      5 172.16.128.19 (172.16.128.19) 631.013 ms 583.867 ms 1562.693 ms
      6 172.16.64.61 (172.16.64.61) 1658.335 ms 1537.707 ms 1099.666 ms
      7 172.16.100.1 (172.16.100.1) 1156.839 ms 1302.108 ms 1372.232 ms
      8 iamrt01p.idc.aramiska.net (172.16.101.254) 794.488 ms 528.926 ms 569.041 ms
      9 213.181.59.142 (213.181.59.142) 602.372 ms 606.007 ms 732.337 ms
      10 cbu-pcbru11-pecbru21-pos31.car.belbone.be (213.181.59.198) 707.791 ms 782.617 ms 619.338 ms
      11 so-6-1-2-bcr1.bru.cw.net (206.24.147.189) 743.572 ms 759.283 ms 732.355 ms
      12 so-5-1-0-dcr2.par.cw.net (195.2.10.34) 906.991 ms 770.496 ms 628.550 ms
      13 as0-dcr1.par.cw.net (195.2.10.161) 904.086 ms 658.604 ms 1547.670 ms
      14 so-0-0-0-dcr1.was.cw.net (195.2.10.117) 670.472 ms 822.322 ms 698.954 ms
      15 dcr1-so-2-0-0.Washington.savvis.net (206.24.238.17) 620.367 ms 654.039 ms 711.492 ms
      16 dcr2-loopback.SanFranciscosfo.savvis.net (206.24.210.100) 848.040 ms 795.551 ms 879.444 ms
      17 bhr1-pos-0-0.SantaClarasc8.savvis.net (208.172.156.198) 1360.829 ms 994.331 ms 758.175 ms
      18 csr1-ve240.SantaClarasc8.savvis.net (66.35.194.34) 1306.824 ms 1061.993 ms 861.418 ms
      19 66.35.212.174 (66.35.212.174) 1148.671 ms 1076.630 ms 696.751 ms
      20 slashdot.org (66.35.250.150) 983.516 ms 1103.163 ms 778.011 ms
      --
      Virtually serving coffee
    2. Re:VoIP by melonman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There are also a cluster of problems connected with how satellite connections handle character data. The satellite hop is converted from IP packets to something streaming, and then the packets are rebuilt at the other end. That process (the details of which I don't pretend to understand) works very well for streaming data, and very badly for a couple of typed characters a second. The worst case I have come across is ssh, which can lag by 5 seconds on occasions, which I think is either because some of the handshaking takes several exchanges of packets or because the Earth station waits in the hope that a few more packets will come along to fill its "bucket". FTPing a load of small files is pretty bad too, because the handshaking for each file takes several seconds.

      --
      Virtually serving coffee
  9. Skynet anyone? by Billy_D_Goat · · Score: 4, Funny

    Would this be any relation to Skynet perhaps? Flynet: Skynet's little sister.

  10. 0wned! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny


    Well, you should have updated you XP to SP2 before putting you IP address on /. dude!

    Now let us see if we can crank up the volume and start playing back those interesting "documentaries" you've got in:

    c:\Program Files\Accounting\Private\Pervysnsluts_2004_njr_rel .avi

  11. Heh by tmasky · · Score: 5, Funny

    I wonder who's insecure laptop is going to join the Mile High club first.

  12. Mwuhahahahha by evil-osm · · Score: 2, Funny

    ping -f -s1460 172.16.64.1

    --


    E.

    Never rub another man's rhubarb - The Joker
    1. Re:Mwuhahahahha by raju1kabir · · Score: 4, Insightful
      ping -f -s1460 172.16.64.1

      Um, you do know what network 172.16 is in, right? Next will you be launching a DOS against 127.0.0.1?

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
    2. Re:Mwuhahahahha by BLAG-blast · · Score: 3, Funny
      ping -f -s1460 172.16.64.1

      Nooooooooooooooooooooo! That's my IP address dude!

      --
      M0571y H@rml355.
    3. Re:Mwuhahahahha by drdink · · Score: 4, Informative

      Please stop propagating the myth of classful routing. 172.16.0.0 is neither class B, class C, or any other class. It is 172.16.0.0/12. This is CIDR (Classless Inter-Domain Routing). Please see RFC 1519 about CIDR and RFC 3330 about 172.16.0.0/12 and other special use IP addresss.

      --
      Beware, Nugget is watching... See?
  13. Back in September... by beebware · · Score: 2, Interesting

    When I went to Tokyo from Heathrow, London, UK via Munich, Germany - the Munich to Tokyo flight (all the route was by Luthansa German Airlines), they had wireless internet access by Boeing Connexions. If you look out at airport (Munich had them in September when I flew), you may be able to get a $10 free internet access voucher. Just a quick note: The internet access is WiFi, so you will need an appropriate Wifi card - I took plenty of network cables, but my Wifi card for my laptop was "faulty" so I didn't have any internet access :( . It's worth also pointing out that at least in "cattle class" (I can't say for Business or First class), there are NO charging points, so make sure you have plenty of battery power.

    1. Re:Back in September... by Marton · · Score: 3, Informative

      They (Lufthansa) have AC outlets in business class (and of course in first), it accepts a European or a non-grounded US plug. They even have USB outlets for charging a PDA...

      They also have a CAT-5 connector right next to the USB port. It does not seem to be hooked up to anything meaningful though.

  14. Wow! by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 3, Funny

    Step 11 on the traceroute was really interesting.

    11 581538 ms 582667 ms 6659876 ms mgs.nasa.mars.net

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
  15. Latency? by powerline22 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Funny, someone from Apple was a bit bored during one flight, so they fired up iChat AV and had a videoconference at 30,000 feet, and it was fine.

  16. sharing? by cbc1920 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What's to stop someone from purchasing the access and then sharing it with everyone on the plane through an ad-hoc wireless bridge? (except for those pesky regulations)

  17. The only time I could lose in HALO and... by IronChefMorimoto · · Score: 2, Funny

    Playing HALO PC multiplayer from 30K feet kind of gives me immunity from "no0b" accusations, seeing as I'm a l337 airborne hax0r with this service. Sadly, I will get my ass kicked with those pings, but, by god, I'll be a pioneer of the Mile High Gaming Club.

    IronChefMorimoto

    P.S. - Wait a minute. I suck at HALO PC multiplayer on the ground.

  18. Thought he was pretty cool... by ari_j · · Score: 2, Insightful

    C:\Documents and Settings\Marton>tracert www.slashdot.org

    Man, I thought he was leet until I saw that. What a shame.

    That said, I really don't think this is cost-justified for most people. $30 for the flight to slowly read e-mail and such, things that you can just as easily (and more quickly) do on the ground before or after the flight. There certainly exist situations in which this is worth the money, but the cool factor alone doesn't cover it, at least not for me.

  19. Re:The new Boeing/Airbus consortium by Tx · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's not just for Boeing aircraft. From the connexion web site:

    Installation
    The system can be installed on any aircraft with a seating capacity of 100 or more during a scheduled maintenance interval. Connexion by Boeing is currently working with aircraft manufacturers to develop the capability for in-line production installations.

    --
    Oh no... it's the future.
  20. This could make air travel pay off! by AtariAmarok · · Score: 4, Funny

    1. Pay $30 for email in airplane
    2. Login and check email
    3. Receive Nigerian offer to give you $15,000
    4. Profit!

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  21. Flamebait by AtariAmarok · · Score: 2, Funny

    Beware, Joe Camel is moderating today. I was modded down for saying something similar.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  22. Slashdot on a Plane by AtariAmarok · · Score: 5, Funny

    Flight Attendant: "Sorry, sir. After you posted that message about the iPod on Slashdot, Cowboy Neal notified us to mod you down. You can't sit in first class anymore. Please find a seat in coach. Oh, and if you do it again? You will have to sit on the wing with the other gremlins. Gremlins? That is what we call trolls here. Look outside and you will see a few right now GNAA'ing on the wings."

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  23. planes did in fact crash... by Jussi+K.+Kojootti · · Score: 3, Informative

    There have been many fires in aeroplanes due to smoking. I believe a Boeing 707 even crash landed near Orly (Paris) in the 70s because of that. The pilots were the only ones that didn't asphyxiate.

  24. The smokers forced the ban by AtariAmarok · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I remember when it was allowed. Smokers routinely smoked in the non-smoking section, and threw burning trash on the floor of the plane.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  25. Tell me about it! by AtariAmarok · · Score: 4, Funny
    "And while we are at it, LEARN TO LINE WRAP. Trust the browser to do it for you, man"

    Tell me about it
    There is this one AC
    Who types every troll
    like this. It makes them
    all look like Haiku.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  26. Profit! by Gudlyf · · Score: 5, Funny
    1. Pay the $30 fee for your in-flight connection.
    2. Connect your own pocket wireless AP to your laptop.
    3. Offer the rest of the plane access to your AP for $10.
    4. Profit! (?)
    --
    Trolls lurk everywhere. Mod them down.
  27. Productivity? by FooledYouI'mAScript · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Do we need to be more productive? Seems we do well enough. Grab a Neal Stephenson paperback, order the alcoholic beverage of your choice, and enjoy some down time. Barring, of course, overweight people and/or children in the adjacent seats.

  28. For everything else by Jurph · · Score: 2, Funny

    Plane Ticket to Germany: $750
    Internet Access in the Air: $30
    GMail Account: Free

    Having Slashdot publish your story before you land:
    Priceless.

    The best things in life are free; for everything else, there's someone stealing your slogan.

  29. northwest by cyberwave · · Score: 2, Informative

    Northwest is the worst way to fly to Japan. Japan Airlines is the ONLY way to go. Trust me on this--I've tried both extensively myself, and consumer reports shows that northwest is one of the worst airlines, experience wise, though they migh have good prices.

  30. traceroute is a measure of latency by rminsk · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Traceroute is a measure of latency and not a measure of bandwidth. Traceroute just sends one packet at a time with an ever increasing hop count. It would be nice to see some bandwidth tests.

  31. Re:coverage by Marton · · Score: 2, Informative

    You should try to get a refund for your $30 then. :)

    For what it's worth, they were *supposed* to have Internet flying in to New York from Frankfurt as well. WiFi worked, and I got the pages served from the onboard portal, but clicking the purchase link (that takes you to a server on the ground) resulted in "Page cannot be displayed" errors. Or "The operation timed out" errors in Firefox. Of course, the stewardess could not really help me. I told her that even though their onboard WiFi is up, the satellite link seems to be down. She said they'd be showing a movie very soon on how to use the Internet.

    So yes, the technology is there, and sometimes it works. And when it does, it's great. When it doesn't - well, they'd better have an onboard network admin as well.

  32. Re:As the Photon Flies by Marton · · Score: 2, Informative

    The technology is satellite based. If they're using geostationary satellites (and I don't see why they wouldn't) then you have to deal with a fair bit of latency. Your ping goes to the satellite, then to the ground, then to the satellite, then to the plane. This is 4x an Earth-satellite distance, and geostationary satellites are on an orbit about 35,000 kilometers high.

    35,000 x 4 = 140,000 kilometers. Even the light can only cover 299700 kilometers per second - there you have your .5 second delay.

  33. Re:As the Photon Flies by Marton · · Score: 2, Informative

    Well, ping and tracert measure round-trip time. So it is plane->satellite->ground->satellite->plane.

  34. Ummm by Danathar · · Score: 2, Informative

    Think about it...

    Fire....pressurized cabin....no place to run (20,000 feet up).

    Do you need a smoke THAT bad

  35. Thanks by StikyPad · · Score: 2, Funny

    Thanks for posting the IP address of the plane.

    Sincerely,
    Al Hackeera

  36. maybe it's just me... by argStyopa · · Score: 2, Interesting

    But is it so wrong that there is a place where you CAN'T get email, CAN'T be contacted, CAN'T be responsible to work?

    As someone who flew to 5 countries in the last 4 weeks, and has spent about 50% of his time traveling since 12/26/04, the only thing that stops it from totally sucking is the fact that I can "power down" while flying and have some quiet time.

    My boss hears it's only $30 more for me to be 'connected' all this time, and guess who's going to be held responsible to make sure those 'urgent' emails get a response next time I'm between Iceland and Minneapolis?

    I don't see this as such a wonderful thing. :(

    --
    -Styopa