FAA May Let You Use Electronic Devices During Airplane Takeoff and Landing Soon 166
colinneagle writes "Members of an FAA advisory panel are reportedly meeting this week to make changes to the ban on the use of electronic devices on an airplane during takeoff and landing. The new regulations will allow the use of electronic devices to access content stored on the devices, including e-books, music, podcasts, and video. Sending emails, connecting to Wi-Fi, and making phone calls will still be prohibited. The announcement is expected to be made later this month, and the rules put into effect next year, according to the report."
Burden of enforcement (Score:2, Insightful)
So you are going to make the flight attendants know if someone is reading an ebook and not sending an email? Seems ridiculous, they have a lot to do on take off and landing already.
Re:Burden of enforcement (Score:4, Insightful)
Seems ridiculous, they have a lot to do on take off and landing already.
During take-off and landing they are usually strapped in their seats.
But seriously, they're their to save your ass, not to kiss it.
Re:Burden of enforcement (Score:5, Insightful)
...and this is why I miss the good old days of flying - when they WERE there to kiss it.
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Do you miss paying twice as much for tickets?
Re:Burden of enforcement (Score:5, Insightful)
YES I DO. Because we had 1st class treatment all over the plane and we did not have cheapskates trying to stuff TWO carry ons that are too fat for the overhead in there or asking, "can you put this under your seat" No I cant take up my foot space because you are too damn cheap to check your fricking bag.
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It's nice that you have to money to be willing to pay twice as much for tickets. But wait, here's a revelation for you: you still can! It's called first or business class, and you'll still get your ass kissed, and you'll have plenty of space for your carry-on, and no one will mess with your legroom (and you'll have more of it).
on the other hand, if you're still buying coach fares, then you're full of shit, and don't really miss paying double. Pick one.
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I'd consider it if it was only *twice* the price. We're talking something about five times the base fare.
Paying double gets you "economy plus" which means you're paying for a meal, a pair of socks and a sleeping mask...
Re:Business class (Score:2)
Also, the "more legroom" is also a thing of the past in many places... the seat next to you will be free but the seat pitch is the same throughout the aeroplane on many short-haul flights.
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Also, the "more legroom" is also a thing of the past in many places... the seat next to you will be free but the seat pitch is the same throughout the aeroplane on many short-haul flights.
Ahh yes, the new BA planes are like that. Right pain in the ass (or leg).
Adjust your work pattern so you don't fly shorthaul.
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YES I DO. Because we had 1st class treatment all over the plane and we did not have cheapskates trying to stuff TWO carry ons that are too fat for the overhead in there or asking, "can you put this under your seat" No I cant take up my foot space because you are too damn cheap to check your fricking bag.
Don't fly in coach.
Free bags in the hold doesn't make any difference -- people often don't use them anyway. BA offer checked bags, but in europe I often struggle to find anywhere for my bag unless I leave the lounge early. That applies in club europe too, as economy pax walk through the "cabin" and drop their cases in the overhead on the way through.
Fortunately most of my flying is long haul, where this isn't a problem.
"OK, landing gear is coming out..." (Score:3)
Wait, who was the "they" that already had a lot to do while strapped in their seats?
I can see the the tweets streaming in from pilots now.... "OK, landing gear is coming out..."
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Even if they were hovering right over everyone's shoulders, knowing whether a user is using wireless or not is impossible.
I'm not sure what to make of this statement... is this abject hero worship?
Re: Burden of enforcement (Score:4, Insightful)
I really suggest you read this article, about the actions of Asiana cabin crew during a crash and how many lives were saved by their training and dedication.
http://confessionsofatrolleydolly.com/2013/07/13/angels-of-the-sky-asiana-airlines-flight-214/ [confession...ydolly.com]
The most important function of cabin crew, and the main focus of their training, is safety. And that's a lot more complicated than demonstrating a life vest and pointing to emergency exits. You seem to have absolutely no idea how important that is.
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It sounds like the software was working fine in those situations. Expecting a plane to land safely with faulty sensors seems to me like expecting a pilot to land safely after having his eyes torn out. Unless there were redundant systems that could have let the software know that the altimeter was full of shit?
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I mean, why don't the terrorist just bring a bunch of Kindles on the plane and refuse to turn them off?
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Can you actually turn a kindle off? I just flick mine to screensaver mode for 30 seconds if they ask, otherwise I just continue reading.
Anyhow, a heart, not to mention a pacemaker, probably have a larger electromagnetic footprint than a kindle and they're not asking passengers to turn those off.
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So you are going to make the flight attendants know if someone is reading an ebook and not sending an email? Seems ridiculous, they have a lot to do on take off and landing already.
I'm assuming to make this easier, services like gogoinflight will also be disabled during this period - so laptops aren't the issue. It's the cell radios that carriers don't want you using because you move too fast and spam too many cell towers in a plane.
They just ask if your device is in airplane mode (or Android/Win equivalent). If the plane has issues during that period, and they find your device is *not* in airplane mode, you get fined/sued/put on no-fly list.
Hell, the tinpot-fascist that works in TS
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"If the plane has issues during that period, and they find your device is *not* in airplane mode, you get fined/sued/put on no-fly list."
I prefer they allow all the other passengers to kick the crap out of the person and break their toy. People need the fear of getting an ass whoopin for their actions, it is a big problem with the USA today. People get to act like babies without repercussion.
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Yes, vigilante justice is the best answer to all of our problems. It's worked out so well in the past.
As long as you weren't a minority, and you didn't care about actually resolving the crime, it was great!
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The NTSB is an independent federal agency charged by Congress with investigating every civil aviation accident in the U.S. and significant accidents in other modes of transportation-railroad, highway, marine and pipeline.
Re:Burden of enforcement (Score:5, Informative)
There are a few instances where they have found the specific piece of electronics that were causing problems, and in some cases purchased it from the passenger.
http://www.boeing.com/commercial/aeromagazine/aero_10/interfere_textonly.html [boeing.com]
Funny thing, all the cases of problems caused weren't cell phones.
Farther down the page, they discuss cell phones. They do put out more noise on critical frequencies, sometimes over what the FAA permits for the aircraft itself. In testing, none actually caused problems.
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Best laugh I've had all day - mod this guy up, damn it :)
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No, that's because the fellow passengers now know that they have to spend the next few hours next to someone who is obviously too stupid to understand simple instructions.
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too stupid to understand simple instructions.
So, regardless how many times you've been on a 757, you watch the attendants demonstrate the use of the seat buckle & air mask? You pull out the card & review it? You look behind you for the nearest exit? You never read a book or anything during this time?
Don't confuse ignoring simple, yet stupid requests with stupidity.
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Indeed i usually check the locations of the exits relative to my seats and have a look at the hatch with the oxygen masks. For some reason I ususally don't check my live vest but I have books or anything else that might fly around the cabin during a take-off accident tucked away.
And in my former post I wasn't talking about not listening to a well known routine, but to deliberate disregarding of safety procedures that just have been spelled out. or in other words: If people don't switch of their devices, the
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Electronic devices do nothing to airplanes during take-off and landing.
Hmm... "Does not happen" is NOT equal to "do nothing." You should at least be more cautious rather than assume the result. Please do not be ignorant. Read the possible effect on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobile_phones_on_aircraft [wikipedia.org] and try to understand why the rule is there. It does not matter at all if nothing happens. It does matter if it happens even once. Your assumption from a few experience is not creditable.
There usually are rules for any situation that involves life safety. The rules usually are t
Good news! (Score:2)
Now all that I need to do is to get my home made EMP device small enough to carry on ....
Re:whiterabbit.obj (Score:2)
run that
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The OP has been reported to the NSA... oh, nevermind, they're already monitoring. See the van nextdoor? :P
Airplane Mode (Score:2, Insightful)
Finally!
A use for the "airplane mode", except "I want to play and not be disturbed".
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Finally!
A use for the "airplane mode", except "I want to play and not be disturbed".
Or for the 12 hours that you're on the plane and not on approach/landing/taxiing
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Boon for the terrorists!!!! (Score:2)
Because the undercover air marshal will be the only one not fooling around with electronic gizmos during takeoff. :)
Possibly the pilot, too.
Finally I can start flying again (Score:5, Funny)
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For serious stuff, I am waiting for faster flights and TSA to go away. :P
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Yeah yeah yeah. Guess you don't fly much.
Oh the 32-34 minute flight from BNA-ATL, ATL having really poor WiFi and equally bad 3G/4G/LTE, even in the lounges-- that time below 10K can really matter. It can mean a few minutes of catching up with family, before a long-haul to Amman with no connectivity out of ATL (last month). It can mean, catching and responding to a client email that's *critical* ($10K, $100K on the line...), even deciding to skip the next flight and reschedule to make sure the clie
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Some suggestions for those situations:
* Before you head to the airport to fly to the area of potential harm, why not spend some time with your family in person. If that is not possible, then perhaps the priorities of where you are and what you are doing should be reexamined.
* If that client e-mail is so important that it cannot wait, what are you going to do about it when it arrives one minute later, after you are on the plane instead of before? This is where delegation comes in. Since that client is so imp
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Some of us actually read books BOTH physical and digital while we are on the plane, or solve Sudoku, etc.
The *medium* is irrelevant.
As long as I am not disturbing anyone, you can piss off.
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De facto allowed already... (Score:3)
Considering all the passenger videos of takeoff and landings that are on Youtube, some all the way from the gate pushback, taxi, all the way up to level flight, they haven't been doing a good job of enforcement anyway. And it's pretty clear modern personal electronic has little to no impact on operational safety of the aircraft.
Re:De facto allowed already... (Score:4, Interesting)
Yeah the phone ban is total theater security. I was flying last week. It was funny to see the older couple dig out their dumb phones when we landed and they both went "Oh, I guess we forgot to turn off our phones. Oh well."
I had heard that supposedly when cell phones were the size of bricks and used a different band they *might* of caused interference at one point but I have never seen nor heard a plane lose access to its key navigation systems due to a phone or ever heard of it crash because of cell phones. I really wish MythBusters would have busted this "safety" myth years ago.
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I had heard that supposedly when cell phones were the size of bricks and used a different band they *might* of caused interference at one point but I have never seen nor heard a plane lose access to its key navigation systems due to a phone or ever heard of it crash because of cell phones.
No, I don't think even back then there was ever any interference data from cell phones. It has always been about not having loose heavy (not so much anymore) articles flying around in the cabin in the event of an accident. And also, partly about cell phones spamming towers, but the FAA doesn't really care about that.
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Who said it's only about interference.
It's also about keeping the passengers alert and conentrated during the most dangerous phases of flight. Simply no personal headphones that might block security announcements from the cockpit. That side benefit is larger than the very small risk of actual interefernce.
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Here's the real way you know it's all bullshit - if just leaving something you bought at Radio Shack turned on could somehow flummox the avionics and cause a problem, do you really think they would let you take it on the plane in the first place?
I think the restriction is more about reducing the amount of free-flying projectiles in the cabin, should there be an emergency.
Mechanical photography, infrared (Score:2)
During later parts of the flight atm
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Get a haze filter. works wonders.
Also get an old fully manual camera, Fight attendants ask from time to time but all I say is "mechanical" and they say ok...
I am starting to carry a medium format old manual camera now on trips as I can take better photos and take them whenever I want Plus it's cheaper than most low end DSLR's if you are sane and accept used gear.
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So are you not allowed to have your device on at all? Whenever I fly from Europe or Japan they ask that you set airplane mode which disables all radio transmission, but allows things like the camera and GPS to work.
Test Team (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Test Team (Score:5, Insightful)
Back in late 90's/early 00's I was working for Qualcomm on a system that used eight GlobalStar UTs in parallel to offer a mix of phone and data service. In the experimental jet we had wifi routers connected into this system, and the jet's diagnostic bus was wired into it too, also a GPS receiver going full time as well (part of the UTs actually). We had several laptops, webcams, and phone calls going all the time - on the ground, in the air, during take off and landing - not one single problem, ever.
The ban on electronics, with the claim that it interferes with the plane's electronics, has always been bullshit. If that were true the ban would be for the entire duration of the flight, and it would be pretty scarey if flight electronics were so delicate that anyone with a cell phone turned on could screw it up. It's about controlling people, nothing more.
Re:Test Team (Score:5, Insightful)
The ban on electronics, with the claim that it interferes with the plane's electronics, has always been bullshit.
The old analog phones put a strong, continuous, signal in a narrow band. This was both an interference problem for communications and navigation equipment (due to effects like front-end quieting and intermodulation, even though the plane's gear wasn't operating on the same frequency) and a signal corruption problem for any electronic device with a metallic structure in its wiring that picked up enough signal to drive the electronics out of proper operating conditions.
Digital cellphone signals, whether CDMA or OFDM based (as well as the OFDM based WiFi) are spread-spectrum. The energy is spread out over a broad band and looks like background radio noise to equipment that isn't designed to collect and concentrate it. This is much less of a problem. Any electronics that would be interfered with it (if the phone wasn't within inches of it) would also be interfered with by so much other stuff that it wouldn't be suitable for aircraft at all.
Now that the Analog cellphone network is shut down (and most analog-capable cellphones are retired), and most modern portable computer gear is also designed with spread-spectrum clocks internally (to avoid generating narrowband radio interference due to all those gates switching simultaneously and periodically), these devices are much less of a source of problematic radio interference.
Meanwhile, the avionics has gone through a couple more generations of engineering, with avoiding dangerous failures from passenger electronics interference as a design criterion.
So now is a much safer time to let the passengers play with their toys than even a few years ago.
If that were true the ban would be for the entire duration of the flight, and it would be pretty scarey if flight electronics were so delicate that anyone with a cell phone turned on could screw it up.
"You can do anything you want [when flying] a plane, as long as you don't do it near the ground." This is doubly true for operating a not-designed-for-air-flight radio transmitter in the plane:
- When flying "up there" you have a lot of room to manouver and a lot of time to correct errors or switch modes if something goes wrong with a system. When taking off or landing you have only seconds to react, and have to be accurate with a couple inches vertically, feet right-left, and tens of yards fore-aft to land ON, rather than under, beside, or off-the-end-of the runway (and avoid all the other planes, buildings, trees, antennas, etc.)
- When taking off and landing you're using a LOT of additional electrical, and radio, systems.
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FYI, GlobalStar was a low earth orbit satellite communication system. Same CDMA signal, but different RF bands, higher power levels (about 5W max), and usually connected to multiple satellites simultaneously (instead of connecting to multiple cell towers simultaneously, which is typical for CDMA cell phones).
But I get what you are saying. It is true that there was some concern about radio interference in the past. But it hasn't been for at least a decade now. And speaking of close to the ground, even wh
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Yes there was significant energy outside the plane. (But anything near an airport that systematically fouled the planes' avionics would have been detected, hunted down, and suppressed.)
On the other hand, inverse-square makes for a LOT of signal right next to the phone. So does being inside a conductive can (along with the avionics), where the energy just accumulates in a handy resonance until it is pumped up enough that the absorption and leakage equals the input. (See the recent article on how hard it i
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The problem is that they can't control what devices are taken on the aircraft. It's unlikely that anyone would bring an old analogue phone with them, but when you are dealing with international travellers with electronics that may not have been certified to the same standards we expect you can't rely on the device to behave. Even a certified device can malfunction.
Therefore the certification has to be for the aircraft, which is why it has taken so long to get done. They have to make sure that given any conc
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Ah crap. 15 mod points to burn, and I just commented.
RTFA. Just *READ THE FUCKING ARTICLE.* This goes for you who are reading this, too.
(Mod parent down, as parent ignores something well-explained in the article, among other problems that make this a run-of-the-mill ignorant comment, not "insightful," not to mention a 1M+ UID claiming unique years deep experience out of their rear orifice.... all I can say, is that if Qualcomm paid this guy anything, they paid ...)
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Let's try it again with a 108-144MHz oscillator.
(For those who don't know, that's the VHF aviation band. It starts right above the FM band, and ends just below the 2m ham band).
It's a bit of a problem because a lot of LCD screens we were driving had pixel clocks somewhere in that range,
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> My planes have never had problems.
That's amusing. Kind of like saying, the STS flights I flew on, never had any problems with the O-Rings...
(hat tip to Mr. Feynman...)
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This hasn't been true cince the 90's.
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No. This is an old wives tale. Up in the air, your cellphone can see no towers, because they are too far away and you're in a steel tube. Even if it could, it wouldn't be a problem, because the phone would choose only one of them.
Hypothetically the problem might exist the other way, whereby too many cell towers can see your phone, but around an airport the interference coming from everything else at an airport swamps anything a phone on a plane might do. By the time the plane is out of the airport zone, it
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Perhaps. But in fairness SMS is THE MOST robust comms channel with a pretty significant link margin by virtue of being part of the control channel which needs to be robust and "up" before anything else can work. When data and voice are have no chance, SMS may still make it through. Couple that with the ability to store and retry without user intervention and suddenly texting on a flight is not THAT surprising. I'm' going to guess you hade mostly clear skies because clouds really do add to the signal pat
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Yup. When the signal is bad, text. It's got the higher redundancy of the management channel.
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... you're in a steel tube.
Mostly aluminium alloys actually. I know, it's not relevant to the discussion, but what the hell, this is Slashdot!
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How do you explain the many calls made from United Airlines Flight 93?
Who cares? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Oh c'mon. Your TSA groping is the most fun you have all week. Admit it.
Tunes during takeoff again! (Score:2)
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Effort in the wrong place (Score:2)
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Why should the FAA care what the TSA is doing?
(Two different federal agencies with little overlap. I'm sure the FAA is jealous of the TSA's budget but other than that not much interaction.)
Obligatory (Score:2)
Thought most of the reasons were for distraction.. (Score:2)
Hmm... Thought most of the reasoning against iPods and other mp3 devices which had no ability to transmit/receive was that by wearing the earbuds you were inhibiting your ability to hear any announcements or instructions by the flight attendants...
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Here is a protip from an experienced traveler: If the cabin starts rotating past 30 degrees, or if it pitches or yaws significantly, stop whatever you're doing and look up.
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Kindle / eReader (Score:2)
I just want to be able to read my Kindle during takeoff and landing. I'm a nervous flyer, and having something to distract me from the mass violation of the law of gravity and the impending death that I fear every time we push away from the stand would really help!
It does keep me buying books in the airport stores though :)
Flying iPods and cabins full of RF interference (Score:2)
A single iPod isn't going to cause any interference with flight electronics. But I've wondered what it might be like if everyone on the plane were using cellular devices at maximum power. Could that be a problem?
Also, during times when the plane is not completely level or experiencing turbulence or headed for an uncomfortable emergency water landing, I would not appreciate having someone's iPad slip out of their hand and fly into my face. Just saying.
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As long as we are allowed to throw the skymall magazine at them if they get too loud, I am find with it.
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Watch as the Luddites crawl out from out of their caves to tell us all how they think it's ridiculous people can't be without their devices for 30 minutes during the takeoff and landing and how they don't want to hear someone talking on the phone etc. Get of my lawn!
Hehehe, yeah, I HATE IT when those arguments are thrown around - when 1. being able or not to detach from a device can not be ascertained as easily as those making that argument make it seem, and 2. Just because a phone is an electronic device doesn't mean that they are including it in the allowed category, outside of airplane mode... something they'd be able to see for themselves IF THEY ACTUALLY READ THE ARTICLE[S} ON THE MATTER .
Re:But the TSA... (Score:5, Interesting)
TSA will make it illegal
Technically, the TSA cannot make anything illegal. But that is just the issue. Once upon a time, in order to control the citizenry, you had to make laws, and the citizenry had some say into what was law and what was not. Now, you have regulatory agencies that don't make laws at all but are given jurisdiction to make what is held as equivalent to law in that if you disobey their rules, you can be charged with a crime. This is not appropriate at all and everybody should be outraged that this is happening.
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>Now, you have regulatory agencies that don't make laws at all but are given jurisdiction to make what is held as equivalent to law in that if you disobey their rules, you can be charged with a crime. This is not appropriate at all and everybody should be outraged that this is happening.
We learned this in Sociology 25 years ago. It happened in the 1930s. There's a great scene in The Great Gatsby, when Rockefeller-equivalent calls up "his" Senator and tries to get something done, still thinking person
Re:Private Aircraft? It's Their Rules. (Score:5, Insightful)
When you buy the ticket and board the plane, you agree to play by their rules. They have the property rights and have sold you limited rights to your seats with stipulations.
It's not their rules. It's the FAA rules. The FAA is part of the US government. Hence the F.
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When you buy the ticket and board the plane, you agree to play by their rules. They have the property rights and have sold you limited rights to your seats with stipulations.
It's not their rules. It's the FAA rules. The FAA is part of the US government. Hence the F.
My bet is that even if the FAA gets tid of it (not likely as the plane manufacturers are behind it) Airlines will still chose to keep it because.
1. They really need you to pay attention to the safety announcement.
2, They really need you to react when something goes wrong.
3. They dont trust you, butterfingers, not to lose it when a 200 ton plane does 0-100 in 3 seconds.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eHooBjxmoXQ [youtube.com]
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The FAA is part of the US government. Hence the F.
For the NSA, the "F" is hidden, but it quickly becomes obvious if you type something like "terror bomb" in a private e#NO CARRIER
fight the power! (Score:2)
Rule followers caused the holocaust!
Also we tend to have higher blood pressure :( It bothers me when people keep talking on their phone, even though I know it shouldn't. And deep down, I wish I was daring enough to continue reading my eBook, even in airplane mode. Also, seriously, why don't people signal when they are changing lanes?
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So here's the thing: It's their plane.
When you buy the ticket and board the plane, you agree to play by their rules. They have the property rights and have sold you limited rights to your seats with stipulations.
If that were true, they'd be able to chose to let you use your equipment on takeoff and landing. Some of them would likely do so, to attract more customers in the highly competitive market, or to make it easier on their flight staff (and maybe get away with less flight staff).
But that's NOT the cas
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What about having people ready to MOVE during an emergency? Isn't that why bags, tables, and everything is put away during takeoff and landing?
I thought it was about avoiding/reducing injuries from flying luggage or hitting the seat or table in front of you with your head or adam's apple if the plane bumped into something, ran off the runway into the dirt beside it, or otherwise decelerated or experienced strong G-forces during some mishap.
Same reason they ask you to go back to your seat and belt in if the
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>What is so earthshakingly important that it cannot wait until the takeoff or landing phases are completed ?
Your rights.
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A hardcover book is as likely to kill you as a tablet - and they're allowed under current rules.