Cell SMS in Planes on Trial Down-Under
jetkins writes "Just days after the FCC announced that the use of cellular phones would be officially banned onboard aircraft in the USA, ZDNet reports that Australian airline Qantas is to undertake a three-month trail of a new in-flight cellular service. Initially installed on a single aircraft, the system utilizes technology from British company Aeromobile, providing a miniature GSM 'tower' within the aircraft cabin. Since GSM phones dynamically adjust their transmit power, being in such close proximity to the tower means that phones will emit only minimal RF. The system operates as a separate 'country', meaning phones must be enabled for international roaming and calls are charged at international roaming rates. During the trial at least, only SMS, MMS, and GPRS (data) traffic will be allowed; voice calls will be blocked."
And when are these asshats going to learn that cell phones do not interfere with flight controls? You'd figure at least one of them had to watch that MythBusters episode.
Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
Blackberry outages???
;-)
Twitchy fingers on a plane???
Wow, I'd be nervous...
This is perfect. My major concern (and the FAA's, as well, near as I can tell--crowd control) about cellphone usage on airplanes has always been the idiots around me shouting into their phones over the roar of a jet engine about mindless crap. You get a taste of this whenever a plane gets stuck on the runway for 5 hours (jetblue, anyone?) and apparently no one remembered to bring a book, mp3 player, or any other noninvasive form of entertainment. Having text message access is incredibly convenient for letting people know what your ETA is, for example, in case they're planning on picking you up and it's a 2 hour drive to the airport--that kind of thing--but at the same time isn't acoustically abominable.
Let's hope this trial is a success!
I left my wallet in El Sigundo!
Honestly, listening to the conversations at the gate ("Bob, could you print out the email to Stacy and fax it to Linda? And could you ask Debbie to scan the fax from Jeff and email it to Julio?") I mostly wonder how these people have jobs at all, let alone ones that can afford air travel.
What I'm listening to now on Pandora...
Uhm, as I recall on the Mythbusters show, cell phones WILL interfere if there is no shielding, but because everything is shielded there is no effect. (Right?)
Support the source, Open Source! An entire site developed with OSS
>> During the trial at least, only SMS, MMS, and GPRS (data) traffic will be allowed; voice calls will be blocked.
Having data/sms access would be nice, but I've always thought that having voice access would be very disturbing. The last thing I need is to spend an overnight flight listening to the knob next to me jabber on his phone the whole time.
If they do enable this in a wider scale, I would hope they continue to block voice calls.
MadCow.
I used to have a sig, but I set it free and it never came back.
So nobody can call authorities during a 9/11 style emergency. They just have to text it out.
hlp flt 423 they r in r plane kling r dudes
Not only did you not read the article, you didn't even read the /. abstract. They are only allowing data calls, voice isn't enabled. Sounds like a good idea to me.
If you must moderate, please moderate as irrelevent, not something bad, because I'm sure someone will find this interest
Just the idea of "Roaming down-under" in a plane reminds me of a bad porn flick.
"Please, shut up. Just when I think you can't say anything more stupid, you speak again." -Archie Bunker.
I remember that years ago when I was on a plane lots of people received calls and text messages on their phones both at take-off and at landing. Mostly those phones were in the over-head lockers, so nobody bothered switching them off at the time.
The interference problem can obviously not be that bad. So technically I don't think there would be any problem implementing the in-plane GSM transmitter.
But whether this is desirable remains another issue. I wonder how healthy it is to be surrounded by so many mobile phones plus the GSM transmitter in such close proximity...
So far we have managed to survive without using our mobile phones on planes - is this really necessary?
I can see the financial benefits as being tempting though, carriers like Ryanair would probably make more money from on-flight phone calls than from selling tickets!
So..how long until the GPRS data user figures out "hey, I can plug in a microphone and just use Skype since its 'data' traffic". Queue the inane conversations using only "data" now. Basically restricting it to data will have no effect as VOIP has been around for a long time last time I checked..
Blegh, people should chill out and not bother everyone else when they are on an airplane.
"To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield." - Tennyson
There's a valid point to not wearing them during takeoff/landing . . . those are the dangerous times for flying and you should be aware of your surroundings and be able to listen to any instructions should something go awry.
You better watch out, there may be dogs about . .
So how did the people on 911 use their cell phones again?
-Clio
Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
Next, we need a way to enable cell-phone access in the shower. It's very important that I let my friends know what kind of shampoo I'm using.
"When the plane strikes the ground at 400 knots, brace yourself on the seat in front of you and await instructions from the cabin crew"
"Because Science" is one step from "Because old book". Try "Because of my experiment testing my falsifiable assertion".
There's no difference in GSM and UMTS as they are both digital networks. ... ehm ... disrupt inflight operations, voice communication won't as well.
So if sending an SMS won't
The bottom line is that you loose your freedom until you are in a plane.
br
Maybe Computers will never be as intelligent as Humans.
For sure they won't ever become so stupid. [VR-1988]
I do NOT want to be stuck in a seat next to someone bored, yammering on about whatever. Keep the phones OFF on planes!
I know how it was *socially* possible -- rule-breaking, like you said. But how was it *technically* possible, when there are all these articles about all the extra hardware they have to install in airplanes in order to provide cell service?
-Clio
Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
...please, think of the bee's
And I haven't seen it documented or published anywhere. Not denying, just saying the info doesn't seem to be as easy to find as you make it out to be. It's certainly believable.
-Clio
Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
You mean to consider that you would get VoIP running at decent quality over GPRS? Given that most of the time the speeds are sub dialup speed I would suggest that running Skype on that would be rather pointless. Not only that but consider the reason they're disallowing voice isn't just for the annoyance factor but because they haven't got the appropriate downlink technology up to speed. Whilst a heavy MMS is chunky, you don't have latency issues (who cares if it takes 5 minutes for the message to actually get transmitted, you're not going to notice; with voice you have to provide a certain level of quality or surprise surprise it drops out) and the other options (e.g. SMS) come nowhere close when comparing the throughput and size wise to streaming voice.
I always wondered where this setting was...
Sorry, but noise canceling headphones just don't work on voices. Perhaps you're confusing the switch setting--they actually tend to enhance voices by reducing background noise relative to the voices.
AAAAAAAAAAAAHAHAHA
You has laughed too hard
You has died
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