Airlines to Offer Net Connections

NFS4

No Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
72,636
47
91
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/national/AP-Airlines-Internet.html?searchpv=aponline


<< By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS


Filed at 3:13 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Check your e-mail. Change your hotel reservation because the plane is late. Download that last document for your presentation. Surf the Web.

Passengers of three major airlines should be able to do all that from the air beginning next year as American, Delta and United start providing fast Internet access aboard their planes.

``More people want and need to stay in touch with their lives while they're in the air,'' said James Beer, vice president of corporate development and treasurer of American Airlines.

The three airlines announced Wednesday they are developing the system with the Boeing Co. They eventually plan to install the high-speed connections on 1,500 of their planes and sell the system to other airlines.

As planned, special antennas aboard the airplanes would connect with satellites to provide Internet access. Passengers would use their own computers on board and pay around $20 an hour for the hookup.

All passengers on a plane that is wired for the Internet would be able to log on, but how fast they could send and receive would depend on the number of fellow passengers online at the same time.

The equipment first would be available to passengers on long-distance flights within the United States. ``The longer the flight, the more desire there is for the service,'' said Larry Deshon, United Airlines' senior vice president for marketing.

A plane is delayed? You could log onto the hotel and rental car Web sites and change a reservation. A major sporting event? If it's available on the Web, you could watch it. A crisis in the office? You could keep in touch and offer comments by e-mail. Need some last-minute information for a speech? Surf the Net and download it.

Airline executives said they eventually hoped to offer the fast Internet access on all their routes. They said they don't know whether passengers will be able to hook up to the World Wide Web when they board the plane, or will have to wait until the aircraft is aloft. Presently, passengers must turn off electronic devices during takeoff and landing.

Airlines, too, could benefit from the new technology, said Ray Valeika, senior vice president for technical operations at Delta Air Lines.

If a mechanical problem occurs on board, for example, a crew member could download data from an airline's computer. Or a flight attendant could send information to the next destination, where a repair crew could study the problem and be ready to work on the plane when it lands.
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CarpeDeo

Golden Member
Feb 10, 2000
1,778
0
0
hehehe- too true Goldenbear!! You wouldn't believe the number of times I've wanted to go on Anandtech while on the pot!!
 

NFS4

No Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
72,636
47
91


<< hehehe- too true Goldenbear!! You wouldn't believe the number of times I've wanted to go on Anandtech while on the pot!! >>


ROTFLMFAO!! You can read that two ways, and the second is hilarious. I guess reading Anandtech in an &quot;altered state&quot; could be fun :D
 

gar598

Golden Member
Mar 25, 2001
1,915
1
0
Those bathrooms are like 4 feet wide so they would probably get crap (not literally) on them. Lately the net connections in the air have been everywhere in the news (a small New York based airlines was ordering 14 airbuses all with net connections, best of all they said it would be free for ALL passengers!) Also the really big concern now is SECURITY:)
 

GoldenBear

Banned
Mar 2, 2000
6,843
2
0


<< ROTFLMFAO!! You can read that two ways, and the second is hilarious. I guess reading Anandtech in an &quot;altered state&quot; could be fun :D >>

What if my first way was your second and your second was my first and then it's not so hilarious then is it?
 

bonkers325

Lifer
Mar 9, 2000
13,076
1
0


<< http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/national/AP-Airlines-Internet.html?searchpv=aponline


<< By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS


Filed at 3:13 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Check your e-mail. Change your hotel reservation because the plane is late. Download that last document for your presentation. Surf the Web.

Passengers of three major airlines should be able to do all that from the air beginning next year as American, Delta and United start providing fast Internet access aboard their planes.

``More people want and need to stay in touch with their lives while they're in the air,'' said James Beer, vice president of corporate development and treasurer of American Airlines.

The three airlines announced Wednesday they are developing the system with the Boeing Co. They eventually plan to install the high-speed connections on 1,500 of their planes and sell the system to other airlines.

As planned, special antennas aboard the airplanes would connect with satellites to provide Internet access. Passengers would use their own computers on board and pay around $20 an hour for the hookup.

All passengers on a plane that is wired for the Internet would be able to log on, but how fast they could send and receive would depend on the number of fellow passengers online at the same time.

The equipment first would be available to passengers on long-distance flights within the United States. ``The longer the flight, the more desire there is for the service,'' said Larry Deshon, United Airlines' senior vice president for marketing.

A plane is delayed? You could log onto the hotel and rental car Web sites and change a reservation. A major sporting event? If it's available on the Web, you could watch it. A crisis in the office? You could keep in touch and offer comments by e-mail. Need some last-minute information for a speech? Surf the Net and download it.

Airline executives said they eventually hoped to offer the fast Internet access on all their routes. They said they don't know whether passengers will be able to hook up to the World Wide Web when they board the plane, or will have to wait until the aircraft is aloft. Presently, passengers must turn off electronic devices during takeoff and landing.

Airlines, too, could benefit from the new technology, said Ray Valeika, senior vice president for technical operations at Delta Air Lines.

If a mechanical problem occurs on board, for example, a crew member could download data from an airline's computer. Or a flight attendant could send information to the next destination, where a repair crew could study the problem and be ready to work on the plane when it lands.
>>

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posted already nfs4
i did it like 2 weeks ago ;)