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- <text id=92TT1248>
- <title>
- June 08, 1992: The Office Goes Airborne
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- June 08, 1992 The Balkans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 72
- The Office Goes Airborne
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Traditional airline seatbacks are about to become full-service
- communications centers
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE VAN VOORST/WASHINGTON
- </p>
- <p> First it was the home. Phones, fax machines and PCs made
- it impossible to leave work at the office. Then the cellular
- phone made the car, even the golf course, fair game. In 1984
- Airfone Inc., a GTE subsidiary, began installing telephones on
- airplanes. But their old-fashioned analog circuitry, vulnerable
- to interference, made many calls sound as if they came from
- Mars. Moreover, plane phones were usually scarce, located either
- fore or aft or shared, one to a three-seat complex, leaving
- travelers a reasonable excuse for staying blissfully out of
- pocket.
- </p>
- <p> Soon even this partial sanctuary will be lost. In-Flight
- Phone Corp. of Oak Brook, Ill., a newcomer to the field, has
- begun installing advanced digital telephone systems in each and
- every seat, complete with video screens and ground data links
- that will revolutionize service in the sky. Each passenger will
- have a handset stowed in the armrest and a 4.5-in. by 6-in.
- screen mounted in the seat ahead, just above the tray table.
- </p>
- <p> As they take their seats, passengers will find their names
- and welcome aboard already on their screens. News and weather
- data will scroll past as they settle in, followed by the
- ineluctable buckle-up-for-safety sermon. Next will come a menu
- with instructions (in four languages) on how to swipe any credit
- card through the electronic reader on the handset to pay the
- costs of a phone call.
- </p>
- <p> What will impress telephone users aloft most, however, is
- the marked improvement in voice quality. The digital system,
- which represents and transmits information in strings of 0s and
- 1s that ensure accuracy, also comes equipped with a built-in
- computerized noise suppressor. Analog systems, which translate
- sound waves captured by microphones into electronic
- representations -- or analogs -- amplify the background noise
- along with the voice, and wax and wane depending on atmospheric
- conditions. Using digital technology, the new phones achieve
- quality equal to what earthlings get calling across town, even
- with the faintest signal.
- </p>
- <p> For the first time, thanks to a Federal Communications
- Commission decision, passengers can receive incoming calls in
- flight -- routed through a central switchboard and wordlessly
- announced on the video screen so as not to disturb snoozers.
- More important, passengers will be able to transmit high-quality
- computer or telefax data from their seats. Travelers carrying
- laptop computers need simply plug into the standard AT&T RJ-11
- connector in the armrest; laptopless passengers can use the
- system's built-in keypad to punch out a message, displayed on
- the video screen, and send it.
- </p>
- <p> The telephone and screen at each seat will transform the
- airplane armchair into a shopping and entertainment center,
- granting passengers access to everything from the boss's latest
- memo to computerized shopping catalogs to Nintendo. The
- difference is digital. The new FCC-approved system allows for
- safe and continuous operation even on takeoffs and landings. The
- high-tech electronic gear on the airplanes connects to a series
- of 80 ground centers scattered strategically across the U.S. and
- Canada. Whereas now lengthy calls must often be redialed when
- the plane leaves one area, continuous phone connections will
- soon be available. Negotiations are under way to link up with
- similar systems being designed in Europe and the Far East.
- </p>
- <p> Market analysts predict a huge growth in the service.
- Currently some 1,700 U.S. commercial airliners carry telephones,
- a number that will double by 1995. Passenger volume, hence
- potential customers, will soar from 452 million to nearly 800
- million by 1999. Airfone president Robert Calafell predicts a
- "half a billion-dollar" industry by 1996. In addition to
- In-Flight -- whose system American, USAir and Northwest have
- already agreed to test -- four other companies have won fcc
- approval to offer digital service. One of them is Airfone, which
- is playing technological catch-up, and will go digital later
- this year. Its system will be distinguished from In-Flight's by
- having a small screen in the handset rather than on the
- seatback. "It's a communications and entertainment profit center
- for us all," says David Shipley, assistant vice president at
- USAir, which is installing In-Flight in its new Boeing 757s. "If
- you want to compete with the majors, you better have digital
- phones."
- </p>
- <p> Passengers can only benefit from the competition.
- In-Flight is proposing to undercut Airfone's $8 three-minute
- tariff at $6. Spokesman Joe Hopkins of United Airlines, an
- Airfone customer that plans to switch to the advanced digital
- system, says, "Onboard telephone service has evolved from a
- unique feature to an everyday necessity. We now hear complaints
- when it's not available."
- </p>
- <p> There may be some wishful thinking in all this marketing
- optimism. The rapid introduction of hi-tech doodads in the past
- has often met with consumer resistance that lasts until people
- figure out how the technology can actually improve their lives.
- And there are plenty of traditionalists who will regret this
- triumph of technology over privacy. For them, the outlook will
- get steadily worse. Motorola Inc. hopes soon to begin deploying
- its $3.5 billion Iridium global cellular communications system.
- The Iridium network -- 77 automobile-size communications
- satellites in orbits 500 miles high -- should be in place by
- 1997. By then, with home and hearth violated, automobile,
- restaurant and airplane no longer consecrated, skiers on
- Zermatt's slopes and explorers at the South Pole will be
- susceptible to being overtaken by the message "The office
- calling."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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