Yes! I can take my internet addiction to the skies

NYCDooDahMan

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Long-distance Web surfing comes closer

Services from Boeing and iPass will let business travellers securely surf the Web on flights

Business travellers will be able to surf the Web securely on long-distance flights by combining services from Boeing and iPass, the companies plan to announce on Monday.


IPass, which makes software that connects travellers to their offices from remote locations, said corporate customers will be able to connect to the Web on planes within six months using wireless links from Boeing.


The companies are betting that business travellers, who already connect their laptop computers wirelessly in hotels, cafes and airports around the world, want to stay connected on the plane.


The market for airborne Internet has been slow to develop. Northern Sky Research predicts that it could grow to between $200m (£111m) to $300m by 2008 from roughly $5m to $10m this year.


So far Boeing only provides Internet links on a few long-haul routes for German carrier Lufthansa but it said seven airlines have plans to outfit their planes.


The aerospace company recently signed up Germany's Siemens AG as its first large corporate client.


Boeing sets up so-called wireless hot spots in the sky by using satellites to deliver the Internet to planes and extending these links to passengers' laptops via Wi-Fi, or short-range wireless links which work on most laptops.


Customers of iPass will not need to sign for a separate service to use the Boeing links. iPass hasn't finalised how much it plans to charge for the on-board service.

Reuters
August 23, 2004, 10:55 BST
 
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