US Airways is studying a number of options for its domestic in-flight offering, including providing connectivity to passengers. I'm doing some research and I'm curious - do pilots want or have any use for in-flight Internet? And, for that matter, what do FA's think about it?
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Do pilots want or have any use for in-flight Internet?
#2
Posted 04 February 2009 - 04:47 PM
Except for deadheading, it would be pretty useless since we are not allowed even non-technical reading in the cockpit while enroute (block-out to block-in.)
And, no doubt it will be outrageously expensive to begin with. Employees, of course, will get a discount on the service which will merely make it extraordinarily expensive for them (like the "good deal" we got on those old AT&T Airphones...yeah, right!)
Also, broadband connectivity likely would allow internet phone calls a la Skype. Won't THAT make for a lovely cabin atmosphere....some overblown, self-important suit conducting business at 90 decibels from PHL to LAX. (Ooops! I really didn't mean to spill my tomato juice on your titanium laptop....Sorry.)
Keep it, as far as I'm concerned. I already spend too much time on the computer as most folks here will attest to.
And, no doubt it will be outrageously expensive to begin with. Employees, of course, will get a discount on the service which will merely make it extraordinarily expensive for them (like the "good deal" we got on those old AT&T Airphones...yeah, right!)
Also, broadband connectivity likely would allow internet phone calls a la Skype. Won't THAT make for a lovely cabin atmosphere....some overblown, self-important suit conducting business at 90 decibels from PHL to LAX. (Ooops! I really didn't mean to spill my tomato juice on your titanium laptop....Sorry.)
Keep it, as far as I'm concerned. I already spend too much time on the computer as most folks here will attest to.
No time like the present. Procrastinate now!
#3
Posted 04 February 2009 - 04:57 PM
nycbusdriver, on Feb 4 2009, 05:47 PM, said:
Also, broadband connectivity likely would allow internet phone calls a la Skype. Won't THAT make for a lovely cabin atmosphere....some overblown, self-important suit conducting business at 90 decibels from PHL to LAX. (Ooops! I really didn't mean to spill my tomato juice on your titanium laptop....Sorry.)
Actually cell phone and voice over the internet protocol (VOIP) are not permitted on AA's gogo inflight wifi (thank goodness!); I would assume that any other carriers would have the same restrictions.
AA Inflight Wifi
Due to financial constraints, the light at the end of the tunnel has been turned off
#4
Posted 04 February 2009 - 05:07 PM
nyc is right - very limited need for this during flight. Maybe to check the NEXRAD weather for strategic route changes along the way, but not much else. I could see its use to be beneficial reaching the gate area though - there's lots of professional uses for internet there. But a simple router would work for that.
NLC
#5
Posted 04 February 2009 - 06:23 PM
FutureUScapt, on Feb 4 2009, 05:57 PM, said:
Actually cell phone and voice over the internet protocol (VOIP) are not permitted on AA's gogo inflight wifi (thank goodness!); I would assume that any other carriers would have the same restrictions.
AA Inflight Wifi
AA Inflight Wifi
That page says they are not supported. It does not say they are prohibited.
They likely block the big VoIP provider addresses and the standard ports. I could (and did this, when Boeing still had connexion) simply jam the session thru a VPN tunnel and get it anyway.
That said, doing either sucks on the airplane. The latent nature of the connection to the plane makes using the connection (VPN or otherwise) for VoIP all but impossible. If it's usable at all, it will sound like a really bad CB radio.
Saving the world, one clue at a time.
#6
Posted 04 February 2009 - 06:50 PM
Yes or No....I've noticed there is a wireless network on our Airbus A330...What's up with that?
US AIRWAYS´s low cost cutting edge autopilot blowup doll is back from vacation with a TAN!
#7
Posted 04 February 2009 - 07:18 PM
#8
Posted 04 February 2009 - 07:26 PM
Interesting. Would there be any need or interest to upload searchable PDF files of flight manuals from a pilot's own commercial laptop computer (or an EFB for that matter) during flight rather than have to look for the information in a printed manual?
Could not the service also be used by crew members for operational messages such as flight routing information, passenger manifests, onboard inventory requirements, maintenance data or other status reports? Or is this simply in the "nice to have" category?
Could not the service also be used by crew members for operational messages such as flight routing information, passenger manifests, onboard inventory requirements, maintenance data or other status reports? Or is this simply in the "nice to have" category?
#9
Posted 04 February 2009 - 07:26 PM
etops1, on Feb 4 2009, 08:18 PM, said:
since when did you work for usairways
.just giving you crap.
Oh yeah I still keep saying we, our, us, etc. etc...think I should go and see a Shrink about being in denial?
I am wondering because when I nonrevved to Europe all summer and was on an A330 I would find a "free wifi" network halfway across the Atlantic but of course it won't connect...I was thinking it was the IFE but...doubted it.
US AIRWAYS´s low cost cutting edge autopilot blowup doll is back from vacation with a TAN!
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