Go Back   WirelessAdvisor.com Forums > Wireless Topics > GENERAL Wireless Discussion

GENERAL Wireless Discussion

|

In-Flight Mobile Usage in Wireless Topics; "Personally, I think people should have to turn off their ..."




Ad Links
T-Mobile Deals
Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 08-28-2004, 3:31 PM    #1
Droid you're looking for
Mug Winner! Shirt Winner! 
 
MOTOhooligan's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Chili Town
Posts: 6,707
Phone(s): a855, V3t, v620
Provider(s): Voicestream Wireless, Western Wireless
Devices: Motorola S805, Motorola HS350, Apple MacBook
Thanks: 3
Thanked 11 Times in 8 Posts
Images: 21
21 Images
Default In-Flight Mobile Usage

Personally, I think people should have to turn off their mobile devices, whether or not there is a safty issue. I don't have a problem with people using SMS or some other feature which does not make noise but the last thing we need is 100 people having different conversations while you're trapped within 50 feet of them. Lemmy knows I can't take it when I'm in a public place and people are using their mobile phones and I can escape from them. For some reason, people forget they're in public and talk on their wireless phones as though they were in the privacy of their own homes and they are not. The article makes a good point about listening to someone's personalized ringtone going off all the time, that drives me insane whether it's a personalized ringtone or not. Hell, my ringtone drives me insane if I'm getting a lot of calls but that rarely happens. I think as common courtesy mobile phones should not be used on airplanes, just like in theaters or restaraunts... unless you're a doctor, etc. and even then put it on vibrate.


Commercial aircraft might be the last uncharted frontier left in the mobile phone industry. Mobile usage is rising in emerging markets all over the world, but a plane in flight is the one place you still expect never to hear a phone ringing.

Flight attendants still ask passengers to turn their phones off before the plane leaves the gate, even though some airlines now allow arriving passengers to power up their phones once the plane has turned off the runway. But mostly, a commercial flight leaving the ground usually means a few hours of your life that won't be spent listening to someone else's personalized “Your Body is Wonderland” ringtone.

We have always been told that phone use isn't allowed in flight for “safety” reasons. If it has never been clear to you what that means, you're not alone. It's very difficult to find reports of any incidents in which cellular phones being used in flight have caused interference with aircraft radios, radar or other equipment, yet it's a commonly held belief that this could possibly happen. For the Federal Aviation Association, that possibility apparently has been enough to ban mobile usage in flight.

That hasn't stopped some of the rebels among us from secretly typing away on our BlackBerrys and sending messages to friends on the ground while we're stuck in holding patterns, but you generally don't see people flouting the rules to make voice calls — maybe no one wants to test a theory that might have even the slightest chance of resulting either in an “unplanned” landing, or in an FAA-administered strip search upon arrival.

However, just last month, the folks at American Airlines and Qualcomm did test the theory, as they brought officials from both companies and a gaggle of journalists onto a commercial plane at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport that was outfitted with a CDMA picocell network. The plane took off, and passengers took out their phones and started making calls, which were routed from the on-board cell site to the Globalstar satellite network and then to the terrestrial cellular network. The calls worked, and more importantly, the plane worked too. An American Airlines executive on the flight said everyday commercial usage is about two years away.

So, what makes the mobile industry suddenly eager to prove that cellular usage and flying are, in fact, a safe combination? Mobile carriers and vendors probably would not admit it, but the reason could be that someone else got there first. Boeing has begun building Wi-Fi data access into some of its newest planes as part of its Connexion By Boeing venture, and the service already is available on a few, primarily transatlantic flights. Traditional mobile players now want a piece of the opportunity by giving a lot of business travelers what they probably miss most while in the air — the chance to verbally abuse their administrative assistants.

In our hyper-productive society (Or is it just that we're hyper about not being productive?), we are figuring out ways to conquer the mobile industry's final frontier — in-flight phone usage. Maybe it sounds like a Luddite's wish at this point, but couldn't we do without the loud talking, public airing of personal hygiene discussions and all the blah, blah, blahs that are sure to result from introducing in-flight mobile phone usage? Some of us enjoy the relative silence that arrives when everyone is forced to turn off their phones — the loud jerk in 16A can only go on until the seat belt sign lights up, we patiently tell ourselves.

There certainly are other distractions — crying babies and over-amped audio headsets — but suffering through the disorientation of 100 simultaneous, one-sided conversations might be the topper. When was the last time that someone actually took the pilot's advice? You know — sit back, relax, and enjoy the ride.

From Wireless Review
__________________
iDon't but Droid does.
MOTOhooligan has left the building.  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads for: In-Flight Mobile Usage
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Flight of the Navigator KevinJames GENERAL Wireless Discussion 4 07-12-2005 7:56 PM
European mobile usage expected to reach 100% Andy International Wireless Forum (Including Canada and Mexico) 3 05-10-2005 12:04 PM
American Airlines and QUALCOMM Complete Test Flight to Evaluate In-Cabin Mobile Phone Bugwart Wireless News 13 07-28-2004 11:52 PM
Flight tracker Is there a wap website for Flight tracker? wgjr2000 Ringtones ~ Wallpapers ~ Games ~ Mods 0 06-18-2004 12:34 AM
SprintPCS vs T-Mobile for PDA Phone usage byrd48 GENERAL Wireless Discussion 1 02-17-2003 12:10 PM


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 1:06 AM.