64kbps @ 40,000 ft. 232
jumpstop writes "The NYT Technology section reports that 64kbps is now available on business jets. Sure, you can read your email and surf the web, but can you blast away at Wolfenstein?"
Life is a whim of several billion cells to be you for a while.
Mile High Club (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Mile High Club (Score:1)
Re:Mile High Club (Score:2)
Re:Mile High Club (Score:5, Funny)
precision in language (Score:4, Funny)
I would also like to announce that 56mph is now available in my house.
Also, as a special favor, I am offering 92 degrees Celsius to any interested parties.
Re:precision in language (Score:2)
Re:precision in language (Score:2)
Re:precision in language (Score:2)
Re:precision in language (Score:2)
>degrees Celsius to any interested parties
Does your license allow me to resell some of the 92 degrees? Not enough space in my room to put all of them...
Flying first class with decent net connection (Score:2, Funny)
Re:mod parent down (Score:1)
Re:Flying first class with decent net connection (Score:2, Interesting)
er (Score:2, Redundant)
not if your latency still sucks
Re:er (Score:2, Funny)
(btw, I know BFG isn't wolfenstein, so humor me)
Castle Wolfenstein for Apple II (Score:2, Informative)
not if your latency still sucks :)
The blurb didn't state which Wolfenstein or which 64 kbps. For all we know, it could be referring to "Castle Wolfenstein" for the Apple II family. The Apple II's disk drive operated at a maximum sustained speed of (you guessed it) 64 kbps (with any OS more recent than Apple DOS 3.3 such as Diversi-DOS, ProntoDOS, or ProDOS).
Re:er (Score:1)
Re:er (Score:1)
for luser tin hat types... (Score:4, Informative)
This month Honeywell, the satellite service provider Inmarsat and the French electronics company Thales demonstrated a system in which fliers with laptops can be linked, by an Ethernet LAN or wireless connection, to an antenna on top of the fuselage, allowing speeds of up to 64 kilobits per second.
Laptop users need a network card or a wireless modem. The system, called Swift 64, is fast enough to handle streaming video or video conference calls using standard equipment.
The first market is corporate jets, but the builders hope to sell the system to airlines, too. The companies did not give a price but said it would depend partly on how much equipment was already on board. Many planes already have some satellite communication gear for passenger seat-back telephones and for the cockpit crew to use to communicate with the airline or maintenance base.
Boeing has a competing product that is in service on 11 corporate planes, and Lufthansa is hoping to offer it on a Boeing 747 late this year or early next year. Boeing and Lufthansa have not worked out how they will charge customers. Communications experts say they could charge by the minute or the bit.
A spokesman for Connexion by Boeing, the subsidiary that produces the system, said it would allow the use of palmtop-based e-mail service in addition to laptops, and speeds far higher than the Swift 64 system, 20 gigabits per second.
Tenzing Communications, a Seattle company partly owned by the European plane maker Airbus, also provides a slower satellite-based service on a handful of airlines.
Honeywell's demonstration plane, a Cessna Citation, a twin-engine business jet that carries two crew members and as many as eight passengers, carries an antenna about the size and shape of a surfboard.
Planes with long over-water routes often carry satellite antennas; older antenna models are steered mechanically to keep them pointed toward the satellite as the plane banks, climbs and descends. The one on the Honeywell plane is steered electronically. On a recent demonstration flight from Dulles Airport near Washington, the antenna was pointed at a satellite in orbit over Brazil that transmitted back to a ground station in Connecticut.
On the demonstration flight, a user of a Dell Latitude CPx found that the Web site of the Federal Aviation Administration popped up on the screen so fast that the system's performance was nearly indistinguishable from that of a desktop in a corporate office.
Such speed offers white-knuckle fliers new possibilities: for example, it took no time at all to download a 238-kilobyte aviation safety manual.
Re:for luser tin hat types... (Score:4, Funny)
I would hope they'd have such a manual on the aircraft already.
Re:for luser tin hat types... (Score:2)
Heh, you just proved it was comparable by comparing it ! Kinda like if I ran in the Olympics I could be "competitive". I would be completely wanked on, but I'd still be competitive...
graspee
Huh? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:1)
so, no most of us aint gonna be surfing the web in flight just yet, but the article does lead me to believe that it's coming
spoiled (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:spoiled (Score:1)
Each or between us? (Score:5, Funny)
Or are we all going to have to share it between us?
And what happens when the 15 year old in row 27 loads up Gnutella and uses _all_ the bandwidth?
Re:Each or between us? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Each or between us? (Score:2, Interesting)
My responsible limited-bandwidth network use will get lost in the noise.
Implementers of these technologies: please implement per-connection throttling.
Re:Each or between us? (Score:3, Funny)
You setup some QoS rules at the router.
Or, you can just go and hit him in the head with something heavy.
-jfedor
On my next trans pacific flight... (Score:2, Funny)
I can download the latest Slackware ISO!
Re:On my next trans pacific flight... (Score:2)
-jfedor
Corporate espionage (Score:1)
Dont plan on playing Quake III while flying (Score:1)
I imagine the ping your looking at will be from plane to satellite would be horrible. I know a few people with direct PC service get relivitly high pings that it makes playing online games horrible.
Though playing a flying game online with other people while your riding in a plane could be cool.
Or perhaps renting a jet to fly to a lan party while holding one on the jet during the trip would also be cool. too bad the only ones who would be able to afford this for a while is the PHB's and higher.
Re:Dont plan on playing Quake III while flying (Score:4, Funny)
How about down here? (Score:2)
Gotta hate this... pay big bucks and you get sweet speeds on a figgin' plane, while the unwashed masses down here still have crappy 56k in many places! Damn capitalist pigs!
I wonder if they'll charge big bucks for access, like they do with the phones on the planes?
Re:How about down here? (Score:1)
You hate it? I'm sorry; as soon as you're willing to lay down the big bucks required to establish such an infrastructure, then you, too, can get the sweet speeds... wherever and whenever you want them. Indeed someone has to pay for it.
When money can be exchanged for necessary technological goods and services, it would appear that the system works after all.
Re:How about down here? (Score:2)
And in other news... (Score:1)
Re:And in other news... (Score:3, Insightful)
Imagine what this will cost (Score:1)
And you thought those seat-back telephones were expensive...
20 Gb? (Score:1)
<sarcasm>wonder how they accomplish THAT!</sarcasm>
"A spokesman for Connexion by Boeing, the subsidiary that produces the system, said it would allow the use of palmtop-based e-mail service in addition to laptops, and speeds far higher than the Swift 64 system, 20 gigabits per second. "
The sky is falling! (Score:2)
No, but you can Slashdot the nonstop from Atlanta to New York!
WLANs don't bother the plane? (Score:1)
Re:WLANs don't bother the plane? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I ran a WLAN on a plan accidentally... (Score:2)
Microwave ovens are shielded better than 802.11 cards.
You're a brilliant one, aren't you. Apple Airport cards have a marketing maximum range of 300ft. Realistic max is about 200-250. A far cry from the cruising altitude of any passenger plane. I'm amazed that you felt the need to state this "for the record."
My poor connection speed (Score:1)
Blast Wolfenstein (Score:1)
(oh, btw...
Only $10/kb (Score:2)
Re:Only $10/kb (Score:2)
The folks flying corporate jets certainly don't. Fuel costs alone for a low-end jet run ~$300/hour, not counting maintenance, pilot fees and the like.
If you'd rather fly something like a Citation X [cessna.com] you're up to $600/hour or so for the JetA. Don't even ask what it costs for the whole package.
Faster connections possible with same equipment. (Score:3, Funny)
Ahh, word problems (Score:3, Funny)
With the satellite directly behind him?
With the satellite in geosynchronous, low-earth orbit where it should be instead of directly in front of a jet flying at 40,000 feet?
Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:5, Insightful)
Why not the flight? Or the day. I'd pay $15 to have a solid net connection on a 5 hour flight.
I'm looking at this from a passenger point of view, but I think we're eventually going to see (and need) net connectivity in the air.
And it should be cheaper then they think. Why go for a wired network in the plane at all? Pulling cables through a pre-existing airplane has to be expensive. A decent WAP which can handle 64 users at the same time and cover the entire cabin gives you a lan at ~$5-700 installed. Couple that with pre-existing antenneas, get a decent switch, and violla, you have internect connectivity in an average craft for a few thousand bucks.
Wi-fi is already becomming the standard at airports (even though current coverage stinks). Why not partner with one of the many wi-fi providers popping up? I don't subscribe to any of them, but if I found out that my subscription to boingo would keep me connected at the airport, in the plane, and the hotel when I landed, I'd sign up in a second.
Re:Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:1)
<NITPICK>
That's quite a price difference... where can I get the wireless network for $5? I assume you mean $500-700
</NITPICK>
Re:Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:2)
Re:Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:2)
Right.
I bet you'd [have to] pay $15 to have an intermittent net connection for 5-10 minutes of said 5 hour flight.
S
Re:Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:2, Insightful)
The one thing that I'd be worried about with wi-fi is interference. With cable runs, you can handle shielding better. As it stands, they want you to turn off your laptop, portable CD player, cell phone, etc. during takeoff and landing.
Then again, if those are fine to use during the flight, then maybe this would be OK too. Any electrical engineers (or IANAEE) care to comment?
Re:Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:4, Interesting)
But, from what I understand, the frequencies used by the aircraft would not experience interfearence from the wi-fi network.
But this just made me think: I keep my 802.11b card in my laptop all the time, and when I fly, I usually pull my laptop out (typically out of bordom). I never really thought about it before, but I wonder if I'm breaking any laws/regulations by having that little thing on while in flight... and if so, are we going to start seing flight attendents asking people to pull their PC cards out?
Re:Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:4, Insightful)
Because wireless networks can have spurious emissions that their wired counterparts do not have to contend with. Unfortunately, I'm guessing the FAA will never allow wireless radio transmissions in an aircraft.
Re:Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:2)
Um, 802.11b operates on frequencies that are free for use without a license because they are within the bands that are flooded with interference from microwave ovens. Obviously, those frequencies were not a problem when they were needed for something that really matters to the airlines (making sure the food tastes as little as is chemically possible).
Re:Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:2)
Re:Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:2)
Actually I left my phone on once on a flight from Minnesota to LA. As the pilot was nattering on about Denver being below is, in that screechy, too loud voice, I noticed my 800Mhz CDMA phone was on. Sure enough I had a full signal!
I always thought that cell signals were poor at vertical travel. I guess not.
My guesses for why they won't let you use them on planes:
Re:Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:2)
Re:Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:2)
I always wondered how a device transmitting with only 400mw of power "interferes with the plane's systems, but the 10-150 Watt transmission radio's that the pilots use themselves do not. Further, what about the 10,000 Watt antennas that they fly over?
Re:Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:2)
No.
The only ones on an airplane that NEED any type of communication at all with the world outside the cabin are the ones flying the plane. Giving anyone else onboard a connection to the rest of the world is merely luxury.
Re:Already approaching from the wrong direction (Score:2)
Not to mention heavy. I wouldn't be surprised if the fuel and maintenance costs (condensation is a huge problem on aircraft) over the lifetime of the installation cost more than the actual installation itself.
Wolf != multiplayer!!! (Score:1)
Probably not, considering that Wolfenstein wasn't multiplayer. Try Doom
Re:Wolf != multiplayer!!! (Score:2)
What Office Does this guy work in? (Score:1)
Man, if I only got 64kbps at my office, I would be talking to our network admin! 64 kbps reminds me of the days of sharing a 56k dial-up internet connection among 30 people. Now that was slow...
Arrested? (Score:5, Funny)
And if you did, would you get arrested or attacked by the passengers for wielding a weapon?
Maybe arming pilots with a plasma rifle would be a good thing. Or maybe they just need Jabber:
SkieHighPil0t: Help! We're being hijacked!
Sl33pyGrndCtrl: Thanks, SkieHighPil0t, but I'm away from my computer right now. Leave a message!
This is old news (Score:2)
YAWN
.
Already been done at 128 KBPS (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.qualcomm.com/press/pr/releases2001/p
Wolfenstein (Score:2)
If you're talking about RTCW on the other hand....
=)
Re:Wolfenstein (Score:2)
Dude your thinking doom not wolfenstein.
Wolfenstein didn't have a multiplayer mode.
Biz Jets at Beyond the Speed of Light (Score:1)
Now with 300bps MORE! (Score:1)
(legend of the red dragon... fuck yeah)
Jetstream (Score:4, Funny)
The big question.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Awesome! (Score:2, Funny)
Hot damn! (Score:2)
lucy-in-the-sky-with-diamonds dept? (Score:2)
Re:lucy-in-the-sky-with-diamonds dept? (Score:2)
boodeewooodooleeeedoooobeebooooo....
chig chig chig chig chig chig chig chig kerching! chig chig chig chig chig chig chig crash! chig chig crash! crash! kerching! kerching! chig chig chig chig
Boulderdash- one of the best games ever.
graspee
latency (Score:2)
I think not. I would bet that this is a pretty high latency connection to the internet. Thus, playing pretty much any kind of action game would be useless.
Airline Security? (Score:2, Insightful)
Hell, anyone with a modern web browser has the software installed. Then again, GSM mobile phones encrypt their traffic (I think, correct me if I'm wrong), so maybe it isn't seen as a problem.
but can you blast away at Wolfenstein (Score:2)
Aerial TCP/IP (Score:2)
Anyone know where I can get a super-compact frame grabber? Maybe I'll put my helmet-cam online too. =]
This is great, if you urinate money! (Score:2)
Well let's see - voice grade phone calls are $5.00/minute. I wonder what it would cost to download that Powerpoint attachment in my email? A hundred bucks? Yeah that's what I'm thinking.
p2p? (Score:2)
Sooo, when ppl start sharing music and movies on board, what laws apply 40k ft above the atlantic/pacific? Or would it just be illegal when they enter national airspace?
Data and phone on passenger planes has no utility (Score:2)
In March, I was flying from Denver to San Diego in an American Airlines DC80. They had those AT&T phones in them, one per row attached to the back of the center seat headrest. They all had a sticker on them that stated they would be out of service at the end of the month.
I can believe this. How much utility is there in using a phone on an air plane? Almost none. Who wants to talk on a phone when the plane is crowded? How much do you want to pay to use the thing? Nobody that I see ever uses them. It must have cost a lot of money to install those phones, one in every seat. I bet that AT&T lost a lot of money on that one.
Flying on an airplane is sitting back and relaxing for a few hours. If you are on an international flight, then you are going to drug yourself before hand too, else the monotony of sitting there doing nothing for hours.
It would be cool to be able to plug in my laptop on an air plane, if I could get power and data. But how much of the populous will also want to do that? I doubt enough to make it worth the costs.
In business planes, this might be okay. So, who here is going to be flying in a business plane?
This technology application matters not.
In a side note...
AHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!! ! Giant Jon Katz banners! AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!
woo hoo! (Score:2)
Just fire up Microsoft Flight Sim on your home computer and then connect to the plane.
(Remember Turbulence III?
Hmmm.... terrorist actions... (Score:2, Funny)
But seriously... caution by the consumer cattle needs to be taken. I've wondered about the airplane phones for years, but at the price of those I seriously doubt anyone but a PHB or a PHB lacky would use one of those... or someone with a corporate card and no reason to hold back
Re:Flying business class? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Flying business class? (Score:1)
"The first market is corporate jets, but the builders hope to sell the system to airlines, too.
Re:Flying business class? (Score:3, Informative)
For information on the cost of chartering your own private jet, check out skyjet.com [skyjet.com]. The bottom line is that if you can fill the jet (capacities of roughly 8-20), it costs roughly the same as first class airfare for all the passengers.
D
Re:Registration required... (Score:1)
Re:Registration required... (Score:1)
slashdot12345
No, I didn't register it, someone posted that over the weekend (or sometime near like that, I honestly forget).
Re:*WEAK* (Score:1)
Re:*WEAK* (Score:2, Informative)
Re:*WEAK* (Score:2)
BEWARE! The last time I tried this, I ended up with a truly bad novel by William Shatner. At least I hope he wrote it - I hate to think that a ghost writer could suck that bad.
On the other hand, I read a good deal of "The Design and Implementation of the 4.4 BSD Operating System" while flying (as a passenger, of course).
Re:Laptop + 3G = solution (Score:2)
The title business planes, not commercial planes- normally that means corporate aircraft (I'm not subscribing to the NYT to read one article.) My last employer spent quite a bit of money and effort adding modem access to the corporate planes through something similar I'd bet.
If it's FAA approved, and it would need to be if it's installed on the plane rather than carried on, then interferrence issues aren't there- and are probably part of what's normally a higher cost.
Paul