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July 2, 2009 9:43 AM PDT

British Airways won't retrofit for mobile communications

by Nick Heath
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British Airways will not extend in-flight mobile communication to any of its aircraft already in service, CEO Willie Walsh says.

The airline is planning to launch a mobile e-mail, Web browsing, and texting service from OnAir on two new Airbus A318 aircrafts in September.

However, it would cost the airline too much to fit similar systems to its current aircraft, Walsh said Wednesday at the Sita Air Transport IT Summit 2009 conference in Cannes, France.

(Credit: British Airways)

"We are not planning to retrofit the equipment to existing aircraft because we believe it will be too expensive," he said.

He added the airline currently has no plans to let travelers make mobile phone calls during its flights because its customers are not interested in such a service.

"The research we have done on voice tells us that the vast majority of customers do not want it," he said.

Sita, a company that specializes in airline IT and communication, said that its 2009 survey shows 70 percent of the 116 global aircraft carriers surveyed plan to introduce Wi-Fi and GSM/GPRS connectivity for short flights by 2012, and around 65 percent for long flights.

British Airways CIO Paul Coby predicted "exciting" new developments in in-flight passenger communications on new aircraft but warned it is essential for these communications to be "firewalled and separate from the cockpit."

He added that Sita is looking at how modern telecommunications capabilities could be used to automatically transmit and log flight data, such as that currently recorded on black box recorders, to airline databases.

"That is something we really want to be thinking seriously about with the new technology that is available," he said.

Nick Heath of Silicon.com reported from London.

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by tech_crazy July 2, 2009 12:23 PM PDT
The name is SITA (abbreviation for Société Internationale de Télécommunications Aéronautiques) and not Sita. Also, it is not a company but more of an association of companies.

http://www.sita.aero
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by setjeff15081947 July 2, 2009 1:30 PM PDT
Dang! I thought from the headline, which I read too quickly, that British Airways was scrapping the "In-Flight-Web" nonsense totally. I suppose the insanity is ubiquitous, n'est-ce pas?
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by viper396 July 2, 2009 3:23 PM PDT
Thanks god none of the airlines have decided to allow in-flight cell phone calls. All arguments about aircraft electronic interferance aside, I for one don't want to spend an entire flight sitting next to someone talking away on his/her phone. Plane flight can be an annoying, uncomfortable experience as it is without some loud talking chatty individual aggravating everyone around.
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