Don't switch off your mobile phone on this Emirates flight
  21 Mar, 2008, 1045 hrs IST, IANS
   
  DUBAI: Emirates has become the first commercial airline in the world to 
provide in-flight mobile telephony service to passengers, the company said. The
  first authorised mobile phone call from a commercial flight was made Thursday 
at 30,000 feet on board an Emirates Airbus A340-300 aircraft flying from
  Dubai to Casablanca in Morocco.
   
  The aircraft is the first in the airline's fleet to be equipped with the 
AeroMobile system, according to a company statement. "All seats across our fleet
  are already equipped with in-seat phones, as well as email and text messaging 
capabilities via the in-seat entertainment system," Emirates chairman and
  chief executive Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al-Maktoum said in the statement.
   
  "As the world leader in innovation for our customers, we are delighted to now 
offer them the choice of using their own mobile phones to contact friends,
  family or colleagues while flying with us." He said Emirates customers were 
already making over 7,000 calls a month from the in-seat phones. Over the past
  18 months, Emirates and AeroMobile worked closely with regulators and 
telecommunications providers across the globe, completing rigorous testing and 
certification
  processes, according to the airline.
   
  "We are delighted to join Emirates in delivering a genuine world first for 
the airline industry," AeroMobile chief executive Bjorn-Taale Sandberg said.
  "We know that many airlines are interested in AeroMobile and will be keen to 
follow Emirates' lead." According to the firm, Emirates cabin staff and 
information
  videos will advise and encourage passengers to switch their phones to silent 
or vibrate mode when used in the aircraft.
   
  In addition to calls, the service will also allow passengers to send and 
receive text messages, with charges in line with premium international roaming
  rates. Users will be billed on their regular phone bills by their own service 
providers as with any other roaming call. On aircraft where the AeroMobile
  system has not been installed, existing rules banning the use of mobile 
phones by passengers remain in force.
   
  The airline will be investing $27 million to fit its fleet with the 
AeroMobile system, which ensures that passenger mobile phones operate at their 
absolute
  minimum power, thereby allowing their safe use on the aircraft. A second 
aircraft, a Boeing 777-300, has already been installed with the AeroMobile 
system
  and will be in operation shortly.
   
  From flying its first routes out of Dubai in 1985 with two leased aircraft, 
Emirates now flies to over 100 destinations in 62 countries with its fleet of
  113 aircraft. In fiscal 2006-2007, Emirates carried 17.5 million passengers 
and 1.2 million tonnes of cargo. The airline's current aircraft order book
  stands at 244 aircraft, with a total value of around $60 billion.
   
  The Economic Times
   

       
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