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January 2, 2008 3:30 PM PST

Air France to begin study of inflight cell phone use

by Kent German

Now arriving, phones on a plane

(Credit: Philippe Noret/AirTeamimages)

Sorry I missed this one, but in the rush to close out before Christmas, I overlooked that Air France finally is ready to start its six-month study of inflight cell phone service via satellite. As I told you last April, Air France is partnering with a company called OnAir to run the trial on one of its airplanes. The trial will gauge passenger reaction to inflight use, which Air France will then use to determine if the program should be extended to more of its fleet.

The chosen aircraft, an Airbus A318, is a short-range plane used only on intra-European flights, so you won't be seeing the service on any intercontinental journeys. And in any case, the FCC's continued ban on cell phones would nix any mile-high talking in U.S. airspace. Air France took possession of the jet in late spring of last year, but the airline needed several months to get the program off the ground (so to speak).

During the first three months of the study, passengers will be allowed only to send text messages and e-mails. But during the second three months (originally the study was scheduled to last a year), passengers will be allowed to make voice calls. According to Wi-Fi Net News, calls can only be made above 10,000 feet and depending on passenger feedback, cabin crew can disable the service--available through a cable that runs the length of the plane--at any time. As you may expect, the satellite calls will be $2.50 per minute. Also, passengers will not know they're flying on the test aircraft until after they board.

Kent German is a senior editor for cell phone reviews at CNET. When he's not testing the newest handsets on the market, he's blogging about cell phone news for Crave. In his On Call column, he answers reader questions and gives his take on the rapidly changing mobile industry. E-mail Kent.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register)
Myth of "inflight cellphone" use
by ckon3 January 3, 2008 12:12 AM PST
Why do you perpetuate the myth that cell phones could possibly be used in-flight? The phones described in this article would have to be some form of satellite or radio phones, not people's normal cell phones. Yet the imprecise journalism in these stories leave many clueless people with the impression that they could yammer away at 38,000 feet if it just weren't for those evil government regulations! The reality, of course, is that anybody who thinks something you got free with a 2 year contract at Radio Shack could pick up a standard cell signal from 6-8 miles up in the air is ridiculous. And that's before you even think about the impossibility of today's cell networks being able to handle the cell-to-cell hand-off switching for an airplane, which at 600+ miles per hour, would cross more than a dozen standard cells each minute. Heck, AT&T can barely handle passing my signal between cells as I drive across the San Mateo bridge! Please, oh please, somebody for once make clear in an article like this that nobody should believe the myth of using your cell in-flight!
Reply to this comment
Myth of "inflight cellphone" use
by ckon3 January 3, 2008 12:12 AM PST
Why do you perpetuate the myth that cell phones could possibly be used in-flight? The phones described in this article would have to be some form of satellite or radio phones, not people's normal cell phones. Yet the imprecise journalism in these stories leave many clueless people with the impression that they could yammer away at 38,000 feet if it just weren't for those evil government regulations! The reality, of course, is that anybody who thinks something you got free with a 2 year contract at Radio Shack could pick up a standard cell signal from 6-8 miles up in the air is ridiculous. And that's before you even think about the impossibility of today's cell networks being able to handle the cell-to-cell hand-off switching for an airplane, which at 600+ miles per hour, would cross more than a dozen standard cells each minute. Heck, AT&T can barely handle passing my signal between cells as I drive across the San Mateo bridge! Please, oh please, somebody for once make clear in an article like this that nobody should believe the myth of using your cell in-flight!
Reply to this comment
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