Virgin American In-Flight Internet Review, From In-Flight
wintersynth writes "I've posted a review of Virgin America's in-flight internet provided by Gogo. Here's the scoop: Avg. .90 megabits/sec DL, .283 megabits/sec UL, ping: 130.6 msecs, $12.95 for the duration of the flight. Verdict: AWESOME. In fact, I'm posting this from 36,000 feet right now. Skype did not work for voice, even though I'm pretty sure those stats are over the minimums. Any ideas from the slashdotters on what might be going on?"
Probably blocked everything VoIP related to force airphones on you.
I tried dialing the Skype test call, but I only caught every other word. So much for my dreams of in-flight video conferencing while yelling over the din of jet engines.
Oh god, I hope you, nor anyone else, ever gets this to work.
We don't want to hear you talking on the phone while flying, and neither does Virgin.
Logically, they likely blocked it in order to preserve the sanity of other passengers.
Viable Slashdot alternatives: https://pipedot.org/ and http://soylentnews.org/
You might want to try to vpn into work or home, then try to use Skype. Chances are they filtering what ports are allowed, so going through a crypto tunnel will remove this ability.
When the only tool you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail
2 magazines at the airport gift shop could easily cost you $12.95, nobody bats an eye at that...
If there is a god in the sky, voip will stay blocked.
I can't imagine sitting around someone who is talking incessantly on a phone on an airplane.
I don't care to listen to my own family members talk on a telephone for any length of time.
Normally I ascribe all life to intelligent design, but in your case I'll make an exception.
Am I the only one who assumed they are targeting business travelers? 13 dollars is nothing to them, literally - their company pays for it.
Internet on the plane is an awesome concept to the average person, but I think most people will change their mind when it comes down to typing in their credit card number.
No, screaming brats are NOT okay. But the only proven method for shutting them up tends to be frowned upon in most legal circles. However, the constant nattering of someone on the phone does not need to be added to the situation. I fail to see how VoIP and screaming kids are even close to analogous. There's factors such as "kid's ticket was paid for, person being chatted with did not purchase ticket." Thus, it's in their interests to keep things as quiet as possible for the people who have actual tickets.
Canada: The US's more awesome sibling.
I've been working as a contractor for Aircell, the company behind the network, and it is not satellite, except for a few points. The network is 100 cell phone towers to T1 to internet. Max bandwidth is 3Mb. And yes VoIP is blocked for obvious reasons.
For more info, check out aircell.com.
The only thing worse than a Democrat is a Republican.