Boeing Drops Wireless System For 787 217
K7DAN writes "It appears that state-of-the-art connectivity in Boeing's newest aircraft means a wired, not a wireless network. The Seattle Times reports that Boeing has abandoned plans to bring entertainment and information to passengers through a wireless system in its 787 Dreamliner due to possible production delays and potential conflicts with other radio services around the world. A side benefit is an actual reduction in weight using the wired system. Amazingly, the LAN cables needed to connect every seat in the aircraft weigh 150 lbs less than all the wireless antennae, access points, and thickened ceiling panels required to accommodate a wireless network (the design called for an access point above each row)." The article concludes: "The net impact, [a Boeing spokesman] said, is less technical risk, some weight saved, the system's flexibility and quality preserved plus 'a bit of schedule relief.'"
plane-LAN to WAN? (Score:5, Interesting)
The problem probably is that different airline companies want different seating positions, but the article says that they should have solved this issue.
The article says nothing about how the LAN on the plane connects to the internet though. I think that is where the state of the art comes in, the only possible solution I see is through satellite connection, but with a moving plane I imagine that is going to give some problems.
Another problem in this is the bandwidth given by a satellite connection, if there are 20 passengers surfing the net that isn't going to give a lot of bandwidth pr. user.
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Re:plane-LAN to WAN? (Score:5, Funny)
Not to mention the fact that I should have hiw Preview instead of Submit. Grammar (and reading!) nazi's flame away!
OK. "nazi's" should be capitalized, and you've used an apostrophe for your plural which makes it a possessive.
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Please turn in your Spelling Nazi insignia by the end of the day.
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Re:plane-LAN to WAN? (Score:4, Funny)
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~300ms latency is better than 2-4 hour latency.
The alternative is to pay $2 a minute on those phones they have and use the modem.
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While this pretty much guarantees you will get fragged as soon as you spawn, it is still better than watching the same in-flight movie over and over when you forget to pack DVD's.
if we could get the kinks worked out of the (proposed) air-to-air mes
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Plus, I was under the impression that although 802.11 b/g has 11-13 'channels' there's only really 3 non-overlapping frequency-ranges. So each frequency would be fought over by 10+ APs, all stuffed inside a giant pringles-tube, all trying to shout each other down.
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I think just wrestling the chairs around and bolting them to the floor would be a lot more time consuming than plugging in a couple of sockets. Besides, they already wire the seats for sound, video, electricity, adding one more cable isn't a big deal. They could combine them all into one fat cable and a single socket to make moving easier.
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Wifi seems like a really complicated way to move bits the few feet between the floor and the seatback.
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And how often is a commercial passenger jet's seating re-configured? Once every 5-10 years maybe?
Whatever wireless standard they would have chosen to serve the cabin would have been obsolete by the time they could have taken advantage of it anyway.
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Re:plane-LAN to WAN? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:plane-LAN to WAN? (Score:5, Interesting)
As far as bandwidth per user goes, how much does one passenger really need at any given moment? Sending and receiving email doesn't take a lot of bandwidth, and you can go on to do other things while your email client handles that. If you are web surfing, once the page is loaded, your bandwidth requirements are zero until you load a new page. It's not like anybody is going to try hosting a web server at 32,000 feet
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Bill Gates.
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Aw man, my Web 3.0 plans are out of the bag.
Satalite has massive bandwidth. (Score:4, Insightful)
Worst case, you can easily throttle bandwidth to a particular row or seat to keep one user from sucking up too much.
What will be interesting is if first class passengers get more bandwidth than cattle class.
Re:Satalite has massive bandwidth. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:plane-LAN to WAN? (Score:5, Informative)
Boeing pitched this solution pretty hard when they started selling the 787. The 787 overall appears to be a runaway success. It's the fastest selling commercial airliner in history. Airbus has been playing catch up, and currently is in their 7th revision of the plane they are trying to sell to compete with it directly.
So far the wireless is the only feature spec'd for the 787 that Boeing hasn't been able to make work. Given the huge technical risks (incredibly high usage of composites, larger electrical system, increased FBW, huge global supply chain, bleedless engines (normal planes use a portion of the planes airflow to power de-icing and air conditioning) etc. It really will be the state of the art when the plane flies.
Wireless would have been nice though.
No surprise (Score:4, Insightful)
Not the same thing. (Score:3, Insightful)
The costs for an ADD-ON system are not supported by the revenue. Putting a wireless system on an EXISTING plane means you have to:
- Take the plane out of service
- Partially disassemble the plane
- Run supplemental wiring
-
Not surprising. (Score:3, Insightful)
Besides, all this means is that the business traveler will have to carry around a 2 ft CAT 5 cable...big deal. I bet some creative laptop maker comes up with one of those airline power adapters that also integrates a CAT 5 cable in to it. Just plug the one end in to the back of your laptop, and plug in the power and network cables in to the appropriate ports on the other end.
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My first thought was that they would just have cables permanently attached and resting in, say, the little pocket in the seat back in front of you. Then I thought, the most likely scenario would be for them to charge you $5 for a cable just like they do with headphones. Then, they could make the connector that goes into their network unique in some way so that your standard cable wouldn't fit, and you would b
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Of course, if you bought your Cat-5 cable in the terminal, you could take it on the flight...
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rj
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It all goes to show... (Score:2, Insightful)
I can see... (Score:3, Insightful)
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Waaaait-a-minit... (Score:2, Insightful)
So, obviously, they didn't spec this out with commodity hardware -- I'm guessing that and the extra shielding were to mitigate any radio interference that might mess with the avionics. But come on.. there has to be a wireless solution that us
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Airlines are a little different then your home.
Warflying? (Score:4, Funny)
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William Shatner looks out the plane windows and sees a gremlin with a laptop and Pringles can on the wing.
Re:Warflying? (Score:4, Funny)
It's also really tough to see warchalking from that altitude.
Now all they need to do.. (Score:2, Insightful)
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Another reason to go wired (Score:5, Funny)
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Actually they ditched it because... (Score:3, Funny)
"Denver, AA325 - Requesting clearance to LAN - over"
"Negative, AA325 - do not land - over."
"No, not land, LAN - over"
"Landover? No - this is Denver - over."
"Roger, Denver..."
"Sorry, Clarence, no clearance."
etc...
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But that's not important right now.
In-flight entertainment runs on Linux (Score:2)
I just can't decide if it was a good or bad sign for Linux.
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Had the same thing happen when we were taking off from San Francisco. The power supply on an aircraft isn't always 100% reliable, and they probably couldn't justify the extra weight a UPS would add. They could have used a journalled filesystem, though - the system stuck part-way through booting and I had to go an 11 hour flight without any films or anything. Not exactly the end of the world, but nevertheless annoying.
What about the connectors? (Score:5, Insightful)
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As for repairability, It's easy - have a really short extender plugged in and flush with the armrest. Now, if some kid shoves a pencil in the port and mashes it up, all it takes is a removal and replacement of the extender.
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RTFA (Score:5, Informative)
Also, this plane is already several thousand pounds over the design weight, so I imagine that has something to do with this decision.
Would you like Network or Non-Network seating? (Score:3, Interesting)
AFAIC, wireless is useless, even in airplanes (Score:2)
2) I spend how much time on privacy and security, then I'm going to broadcast? Not!
3) I spend how much time tuning and tweaking Linux, but no device driver? Not!
Personally, I don't trust public access points for outgoing private information. Ever.
Please, sign me off the fing airwaves, AFAIC, hardwired is the only way to fly.
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You're going to need one hell of a long wire to get information off the airplane.
150 lbs (Score:4, Interesting)
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"K7DAN" submitted this story.
How are the two related?
Dan East
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The rest of the country is still stuck inches and milles
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I can't even open a laptop... (Score:2)
Unplug (Score:2)
power over ethernet? (Score:3, Insightful)
if they use power over ethernet then they can make the in-seat entertainment system a thin client and use at least *some* off-the-shelf hardware (remember that aircraft electronics, even in entertainment, have to withstands many years of use, far longer than any consumer electronics have to).
it also means they could use SIP phones for providing in-flight telephony and put them on their own vlans, likewise have vlans for security cameras and remote controlled devices.
This has nothing to due with internet access... (Score:2)
Figuring out how to wire a aircraft with multiple seating configurations is very, very hard. Go ask Airbus...
I always prefer wired to wifi (Score:2)
Re:Weight saved? (Score:5, Insightful)
It may seem small in comparison, but it's 150lbs less you have to pay fuel for, for the entire service life of the plane. While this probably wouldn't be a huge chunk of profits gone, why waste money? After a while the fuel needed to ship that extra 150lbs certainly adds up. I wouldn't want to pay for it!
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rj
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That could get you in trouble. (Score:3, Funny)
Whatever you do, do NOT play cs_747!
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Um, the 787 does not have an aluminum fuselage. It is a composite structure. Same for the upper and lower wing panels. And the windows are not glass.
Re:access point above every row? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:access point above every row? (Score:5, Insightful)
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I take that as a caveat for pretty much any
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Do YOU have verification that it would not mess with the aircraft avionics?
[pilot to cabin]: "We seem to be experiencing some electronics trouble. Our primary altimeter is reading about 5'000 feet too high. As we are presently crossing the Apls, this may present a slight difficulty. If anyone is using any unauthorized broadcasting equipment in the cabin, PLEASE TURN IT OFF!"
Keep your jerry-rigged crap at home.
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Most WiFi phones also do Bluetooth. Just set up a personal network giving access via your laptop and the LAN connection. When you get to the other end, reverse the connection and use GPRS over the BT to give the laptop access. Clever either way.