Hello:

This would be nice, especially on longer flights. You can frequently access wifi airports as you can many many burger and coffee shops.

Have fun!



                JD Townsend
                Helping the light dependent to see.
                Daytona Beach, Florida, Earth

----- Original Message -----
From: "Cheree Heppe" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: <[email protected]
Date sent: Mon, 28 Jan 2008 11:50:09 -0800
Subject: [Braillenote] Wifi in flight, in on ground floor?

Cheree Heppe here:

The below article seems to imply a good step forward for laptop
and note taker users. What steps, if any, is Humanware and other note taker manufacturers taking to allow Braille aware note taker access?

Regards,
Cheree Heppe


                  Southwest and American Test In-Flight Wi-Fi

   By MATT HAMBLEN, [3]Computerworld, IDG

   Mile-high Wi-Fi is taking off.

[4]Southwest Airlines and American Airlines separately
announced this
week that their planes will be tested for in-flight passenger
Wi-Fi
   data access using different access technologies.

Southwest announced Wednesday that it will test
satellite-delivered
broadband Internet access on four aircraft this summer, the
airline
   said in a statement.

Southwest passengers with Wi-Fi-enabled devices would have
Internet
access for e-mail and Web browsing after the tests and
subject to
   approval by the Federal Aviation Administration.

The technology to be used aboard Southwest planes is from Row
44 Inc.
in Westlake Village, Calif. In addition to data, it will
support cell
   phone and voice-over-IP calls.

But "Southwest has not embraced voice calling" because of
passengers'
concerns about cell phone calls made during flights,
spokeswoman
[5]Brandy King said in an interview. "Voice is not a
direction we're
   taking."

On Tuesday American Airlines said it had finished the first
aircraft
installation of an Internet broadband connection aboard a
[6]Boeing
767-200 aircraft and will install and test the technology on
all 15
such aircraft throughout the year. The 767-200s are used
primarily for
   transcontinental flights.

Both airlines need certifications from the FAA before
launching an
actual service. American is using technology from Aircell
LLC in
   Itasca, Ill.

Passengers on American aircraft will get full data service,
but will
   not receive cell or VoIP service.

Aircell provides an air-to-ground system that uses three
lightweight
antennas installed on the outside of the aircraft, one GPS
antenna
mounted on top of the plane and the other two on the bottom.
Wireless
access points are distributed throughout the aircraft
interior's
ceiling. Each American aircraft will be connected to a
network of 92
cell towers in the continental U.S. using a 3Mhz signal, the
airline
   said.

The satellite-delivered system for Southwest's planes from
Row 44
involves installation of an antenna atop each plane's
fuselage that
communicates with satellite networks, according to the
company's Web
   site.

Aircell announced plans in September to equip Virgin America
planes
with Wi-Fi access this year. [7]JetBlue Airways, [8]Deutsche
Lufthansa
AG and Qantas Airways Ltd. have also announced in-flight
Wi-Fi in
   various forms.

   Copyright 2008 IDG News Service.  All Rights Reserved.
___
Replies to this message will go directly to the sender.
If your reply would be useful to the list, please send a
copy to the list as well.

To leave the BrailleNote list, send a blank message to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To view the list archives or change your preferences, visit
http://list.humanware.com/mailman/listinfo/braillenote


___
Replies to this message will go directly to the sender.
If your reply would be useful to the list, please send a
copy to the list as well.

To leave the BrailleNote list, send a blank message to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To view the list archives or change your preferences, visit
http://list.humanware.com/mailman/listinfo/braillenote

Reply via email to