Fri Mar 23, 2007 3:43AM EDT
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Back when I was editor of Mobile magazine, I wrote an editor's note about cell phones on airplanes. I figured most people wanted to be able to take calls while flying, and I didn't think most people would mind a little chatter considering the overwhelming drone of jet engines.
I was wrong.
I received some 200 letters from readers about the column, and all but one were rabidly against letting people talk on their phones while on planes. The biggest complaint: People simply didn't want to be annoyed by people chattering away in the seat next to them. (Better they talk to someone on the phone than to me, I said.)
Regardless of the etiquette of cell phones in flight, things aren't looking up for them, despite some tech advances that are making airborne phone calls a possibility. The latest snag: CTIA (the biggest cell phone industry group) has said that cell phones still cause interference with towers on the ground, despite tweaks that are supposed to have alleviated these problems. A possibly bigger issue: Cingular and Verizon don't want to share their frequencies with anyone else, which would be required for airborne phones to work.
Add to the mix the fact that consumers hate the idea and airlines don't want to spend money upgrading their jets—plus the ever-present worry about someone's idiotic ringtone download causing a plane to crash—and you've pretty much got yourself a recipe for a technology that's going nowhere.
My advocacy for airborne phones is really more a devil's advocacy than anything else, but I'm still curious if the winds have changed on this topic. Is anyone out there interested in opening up the friendly skies for cell phone use? Let me know in the comments.
LINK: Jet passengers may not get to chat on cellphones after all
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
I'm a flight attendant, and it's very hard for us. Every time the airlines change policy and allow some electronics, the electronics industry moves 7 steps forward, and there are all new things to be restricted. Regardless of what airlines end up allowing, I think it is more imporant for the passengers to take responsibility for themselves and follow the rules! Trust me, we don't like it any more than y'all do, but it's very difficult to give premium service when I spend half my time arguing with businessmen and stressed out moms about turning off the phone! The adults are 100 times worse than the kids! PLEASE... just act like adults!!
Generally, when two passengers converse in flight the volume of their voices tend to be muted; however, given ample evidence of cell phone use in the boarding area most users onboard will be heard for ten rows in each direction. Multiply that by dozens blathering at one time and you have a recipe for trouble. No in-flight use of cell phones, please.
Airplanes are cramped and noisy enough, without an elbow in my face and a voice in my ear. If I am unfortunate enough to get a middle seat, the potential doubles. Pretend you're in the movies, or in a library, or in church. Turn the blasted cell phone OFF, shut up, and read already.
I don't care as much for cell phone use while flying as long as I can have internet access.
I looked at the Samsung LN-S4051D 40 inch LCD, as one in a series of Samsung LCD models. The entire ...
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1 Posted by zwomann on Fri Mar 23, 2007 8:42AM EDT Report Abuse
heck I am. My husband is on a plane a lot and when he not on the plan, he is too busy to talk. It would be nice to be able to chat with him while in the skys.