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Airbus 380 To Have Linux In Every Seat

jpatokal writes "Singapore Airlines will be rolling out the A380 superjumbo on October 26th, and a surprise awaits in the seat of every passenger: their personal Linux PC, running Red Hat. In addition to running the in-flight entertainment, passengers can also use a full copy of StarOffice, and there's a USB slot for importing/exporting documents or plugging in your own keyboard/mouse. Screen size is 10.6" (1280x768) in economy, 15.4" in business and a whopping 23" in first class (along with free noise-canceling headphones). The system is already available on current B777-300ER planes and will also be outfitted on the upcoming B787 Dreamliners."

9 of 332 comments (clear)

  1. Security? by eli+pabst · · Score: 5, Informative

    Hope they secure these well. With all the business travelers it would be a great place to drop a rootkit. From the article it sounds like each seat actually has a thin client, which would in effect reinstall the OS after each user/flight which is good from a security standpoint. But with access to a keyboard and USB hub, it still sounds a bit more vulnerable to abuse than a standard kiosk.

  2. Re:FWIW by tftp · · Score: 5, Informative

    Of course it's possible, and that's how Linux-based embedded systems work. Your /home/$USERNAME can be created in RAM and deleted (recreated from a skeleton) after you log out (or the system restarted.) There is nothing else writeable on the whole box. This is necessary in embedded systems to prevent Flash wearing out, and to ensure reliability. Same needs here.

  3. StarOffice or Microsoft Office? by Grond · · Score: 4, Informative

    TFA says that the systems run Microsoft Office, not StarOffice. Unfortunately, their video doesn't show any office software, so it's hard to tell. Maybe someone will hack up a version of portable OpenOffice capable of running on the systems.

  4. Re:Delta/Song already uses Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've flown Delta on a 757 and seen Linux reboot, too (I think we lost power while waiting for an open runway slot to take off from). But the system in the summary sounds much different; the Delta system didn't have StarOffice, it just had TV, movies, moving maps, etc. Basically read-only, except for paying for the in-flight movies.

  5. Dedicated turbine by Harmonious+Botch · · Score: 4, Informative

    Not by the engines. Often it is a small dedicated turbine in the tailcone. That way you can have relatively quiet power while you are on the tarmac, and nobody gets sucked into the engines, and the relibility is higher because they are run at lower stresses ( ie: never at 100%, like the main engnes do at takeoff)

    1. Re:Dedicated turbine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      You don't know what the hell you're talking about. Strobes don't consume kilowatts. Batteries must supply all flight instrumentation for at least 30 minutes for certification. Deicing is almost all bleed air powered. Engines need no system power to run, even with FADEC. The airplane will not fall like a rock with a total electrical failure. APU's will start just fine without any truck, at all. Gear is hydraulic, not electric. There are a few electrics controlling it, but they have mechanical overrides that allow the flight crew to drop the gear and flaps without electrics.

  6. And here's a picture of the reboot.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Enjoy a few pics here. Incidentally "Song airlines" were the first ones Delta put these on. Song went out of business (there's a Frontline episode you can watch about it) and the Song planes were turned back into Delta planes. Now all the Delta planes are scheduled to have the inflight video stuff too.

  7. Re:Delta/Song already uses Linux by choas · · Score: 5, Informative

    I just returned to the Netherlands this morning, flew from Las Vegas.

    Delta indeed uses red-hat linux on their 'seat in front of you consoles'

    Also loading some modules which taint the kernel (according to the message I saw)
    I think it had to do with AAC.

    Nothing against Linux on planes, BUT please, have someone on-board to service the
    system or let it be serviced from the ground. As our flight from Las Vegas to New York
    only showed red hat reboots continually during the flight, all the time. seemed like
    Linux did boot with some ramdisk checksum errors, but it booted, but when the X layer
    came on this triggered another reboot.

    I'm a unix guy all the way, and they told me I could not have access to the plane's
    media 'mainframe' or I would have had a look to see what was wrong. All I saw was that
    the whole right side economy side of the plane was left with a rebooting red-hat distribution
    showing a cute penguin in its left corner...

    The whole time... 5 hours long...

    This was NOT a good commercial. I wish it had been.

    The whole system worked perfectly when I was flying to San Francisco two weeks ago!

    --
    I will work to elevate you, just enough to bring you down
  8. Re:In Singapore by SL+Baur · · Score: 4, Informative

    Singapore Airlines is one of the best airlines in the world (I'd rank only ANA ahead of them). The last time I rode them across the Pacific I was amazed at the service their stewardesses gave. I was seated second row from a bulkhead and behind infant row and was amazed at all the attention the parents got to help their crying babies. They gave them more personal attention in an hour than an entire US carrier plane gets an entire flight.

    They already offered a computer equivalent entertainment system (in coach!), but this sounds even better.

    I hate most carriers and I hate flying with all the security and no-smoking crap, but in a bad environment, Singapore Airlines and their sister Silk Air do quite a nice job and Changi Airport is *sweet* as International airports go.

    The Singapore government may have issues with some, but all my experiences with Singapore have been positive. Reading this makes my day.