Showing posts with label aircell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aircell. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 02, 2009

Inflight Wi-fi - still disconnected?

Last year I wrote a piece for TechRepublic about wi-fi on domestic airlines. I'm still suspicious that encroachment into this last haven of being disconnected may not be welcomed across the board, but inflight web access continues to expand its reach every day.
The Gogo Inflight offering by Aircell is at eight dollars for mobile access and ten for normal wi-fi on flights of three hours or less. American Airlines and Delta have this now. United has a plan in the works. Here's a link to the corporate video from Aircell's CEO.
Tip: you can also save 25% by using promo code "wifi25" through 7/3/09.

Friday, May 23, 2008

The Pulse Event (IBM in Orlando)

Just got back from IBM's powerhouse "Pulse" event at the Swan and Dolphin in Orlando this week. If you can imagine every parking spot on the acres and acres of Disney property being filled, you get the idea. Of course, in the larger-than-life Disney/Epcot atmosphere, everything seems all the more enormous.

generationE Technologies was a major sponsor of the event this year as our focus on IBM solutions has become increasingly central to the business. Three big splashes were the service management partner award for our work creating a Google Earth-Tivoli Netcool mashup with Aircell (see their intro to wi-fi when you fly here), special recognition as the partner with the most certifications in IBM's new AAA partner ranking system, and a rollout of a collaborative wiki around the application dependency and discovery solution "TADDM," where generationE was a featured contributor.

In the photo above is generationE's Managed Services Director Gregg Spencer, who ranks as one of the people with the most diverse backgrounds I have ever met. Gregg has faced down an angry mob as a Dallas policeman, single-handedly rescued a large software-driven embroidery company, spent some time in firefighting, miraculously survived a high-speed truck crash and in his spare time takes care of all our internal technical systems. And he's an all-around great guy to work with.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Wi-Fi When You Fly

OK - so at the moment the FAA is about as popular with the airlines industry as an American flag at a Dixie Chicks concert. But once we get past the "recent unpleasantness," there are some changes about to be rolled out that will shake things up in a good way.

Imagine this - your flight touches down, you get off the plane and walk out through the gate. You turn the corner and with a flash of your ID you pick up your made-to-order latte and sandwich. It's got your name on it and it's already paid for. You ordered it through the web site on the flight back and the barista knew when you'd be landing and when you'd be walking by. And by the way you also finished your report on the flight and ten hardcopies are at the printer kiosk as you continue toward the cab stand... where your car is waiting.

Is it reasonable to expect this anytime soon when the airlines are still sending surveys asking things like whether or not you checked luggage, whether you had a connecting flight and if it was on time? Well, the competition for your airmiles is about to get tougher as broadband rolls out to the air travel industry. See the article on Aircell here.

Thursday, August 02, 2007

The End of Airline E-mail Blackout

An update on in-flight broadband -- American Airlines just announced they will team up with service provider Aircell to offer the internet on domestic flights early next year, picking up where Boeing left off, using cell towers rather than satellites. Blessing or curse, you'll be able to keep up on e-mail and access the web, rather than just updating spreadsheets and powerpoints.