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International
airline to allow cell phone chatter on planes
Story Highlights
•Emirates will become first airline to
allow cell phones
•Survey says most business travelers prefer silence
•More airlines expected to enable Internet access
NEW YORK (CNN) -- From cell phone
use to high-speed Internet access, the connected life is spreading to the skies.
In January, Emirates airline plans to
launch mobile phone usage in its planes, making it the first airline to allow
passengers to make cell phone calls on its flights.
And Australian carrier Qantas plans to
start evaluating technology that lets fliers use their cell phones and PDAs
during flight early next year.
Fliers have long been able to keep in
touch with those on the ground by using phones built into the backs of airplane
seats. But the costs of those seatback phones can be upwards of $10 a minute,
plus a connection fee.
In contrast, the cost of calls made
in-flight on Emirates will be in line with international roaming rates, the
airline said. Those rates vary by mobile carrier and by location but can be as
low as $1 to $2 a minute.
But while some upscale, long-haul
airlines are installing equipment onboard that will allow for cell phone use, it
may be a while before the service makes its way to the U.S.
U.S. carriers don't allow in-flight cell
phone calls, although the FAA is reviewing the safety concerns associated with
mobile calls made in the air.
The regulatory agency has asked a
committee to conduct a study looking at whether portable electronic devices like
cell phones interfere with aircraft navigation systems. Findings of the study
are due at the end of December.
Furthermore, airlines in the troubled
U.S. industry are struggling to survive and new in-flight services may not
attract new customers, analysts say.
"There's no economic incentive for them
to do it. Domestically they're not going to bring anyone extra on to their
airplane with that service," said airline industry consultant Michael Boyd.
A majority of business travelers (61
percent) oppose the idea of being able to use their phones in the sky, according
to a global survey conducted by travel management company Carlson Wagonlit
Travel early this year.
But if the technology is there, the
service will eventually make its way to the skies, said Chris McGinnis, editor
of Expedia Travel Trendwatch.
"Whether people like it or not,
in-flight cell phone use is going to become a reality," he said.
Airlines are also exploring less
intrusive ways to keep in-step with the increasingly connected lifestyle of
their passengers.
According to the annual Airline IT
Trends Survey conducted by industry group SITA and Airline Business magazine, 59
percent of airlines plan to offer in-flight Internet access by the end of 2008.
One company helping U.S. carriers make
that leap is Louisville, Colorado-based AirCell, which won a license earlier
this year to provide exclusive broadband connectivity to U.S. airlines starting
in 2008.
Companies have attempted to tap the
market for in-flight Internet access before -- the most notable being Boeing,
which launched its Connexion high-speed broadband business in 2000.
Several international airlines installed
Boeing's system, which cost travelers from $10 to $30 a flight. But in August,
Boeing said it was closing Connexion because the market for it hadn't
materialized as expected.
AirCell CEO Jack Blumenstein said
Connexion's fate doesn't spell doom for the future of onboard Internet access.
For one, Boeing's system was expensive
-- it cost about $1 million to outfit a single plane. In contrast, airlines can
equip a plane with AirCell's technology for about one-tenth of that cost,
Blumenstein said.
Expedia's McGinnis thinks people will
take advantage of onboard Internet access as long as it is cheap enough.
"If you can sit there and stream movies
and read your email or do research -- it's absolutely something people would
use," he said.
Blumenstein said the price of in-flight
Internet access offered by AirCell should be comparable to or slightly higher
than what users pay to access "hot spots" on the ground.
Accessing a Wi-Fi hot spot at a cafe can
run anywhere from $8 for a single day of access to around $30 a month for
unlimited access, depending on the service operator.
Find this
article at:
http://edition.cnn.com/2006/TECH/12/21/wired.airlines/index.html
Oh really? We were told cell
phones worked just fine on airliners on 9-11!
http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/index.html
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