Skip to main content

Airplane Wi-Fi could get a massive upgrade in the near future

If planes were as reliable as in-flight Wi-Fi, we’d never get on a flight again. Fortunately, industry group Seamless Air Alliance is working to change that. The group operates under the mission of bringing “industries and technologies together to make the in-flight internet experience simple to access and delightful to use.” Its idea? To get rid of the toxic brew of current proprietary systems operated by each airline and instead establish a standard for in-flight Wi-Fi that can be flexibly swapped in and out to better allow airlines to respond as technology improves.

“The goal of the Alliance is to deliver high-speed, low-latency 5G quality access inside the plane,” the FAQ section of the group’s website states. “Access to the network will be seamless, meaning any enabled user device will work without any login, sign-on or other activities. The internet experience itself will be as good as, and in many cases better than, the home experience, including low latency, high speed, and a gate-to-gate continuity of service.”

An article for IEEE Spectrum notes that “a plane’s antennas are currently stored in a relatively small hump on the top of the craft, typically about 45 centimeters high. Even though it’s so small, that hump causes tremendous amounts of wasted jet fuel, [Seamless Air Alliance CEO Jack] Mandala says, causing an estimated minimum of an extra $75,000 per aircraft per year in fuel costs.”

New flat top antennas are currently being rolled out that will replace the need for these, making it more straightforward for airlines to integrate new antennas with defined standards that can be seamlessly adopted.

Seamless Air Alliance is in the process of establishing a test program for standards, with a full test planned in the next six months. According to its website, the Alliance is not developing the technology involved, but is rather focused on developing the specifications. “Third-party companies developing products using those specifications may get their products tested by the alliance and receive a certification,” it notes.

IEEE Spectrum quotes Mandala as saying that the open, standardized Wi-Fi system on aircraft may take between one and two years to materialize. However, if the results are that we get high-quality Wi-Fi whenever we fly, that’s 12 to 24 months of waiting that are totally worth it.

Luke Dormehl
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
Spotify could launch its HiFi lossless audio tier any day now
Spotify app and earbud.

In February, Spotify announced its ambitions to join the increasingly popular lossless audio space with a new subscription tier called Spotify HiFi. At the time, the streaming music company was silent regarding pricing or the potential timing for the new tier's debut, but a recently spotted video suggests it could happen imminently.

Late last week, Reddit user Nickx000x posted a video to the Spotify subreddit that appears to show an introductory animation for Spotify HiFi. The video -- spotted first by WhatHiFi? -- looks like it's designed to take Spotify mobile app users through the quick process of understanding what Spotify HiFi is, how it works, and how to know if they're actually getting the higher-quality lossless audio stream on their device.

Read more
Your future United flight could be on this electric airplane
An illustration of Heart Aerospace's planned electric aircraft.

United Airlines could be flying passengers in electric planes just five years from now.

To make it happen, the carrier’s investment arm has given backing to Sweden-based Heart Aerospace, which is developing the ES-19 aircraft, a 19-seat electric plane with a range of 250 miles.

Read more
Future MacBooks could get a big performance boost if new Apple patent pans out
Fortnite running on a Macbook M1.

Your next MacBook Pro powered by a future version of Apple's in-house-designed M1 processor could be even faster and last longer on a charge if Apple's new hybrid memory patent, which combines high-density, low-bandwidth memory with low-density, high-bandwidth memory, becomes a reality. Rather than share memory between the CPU and GPU on Apple's current system on a chip (SoC) design -- which has its own set of limitations -- Apple proposes in its patent, filed with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, that the use of a hybrid system would be more efficient and deliver additional performance.

"Providing a memory system with two types of DRAM (e.g., one high-density and one low-latency, high-bandwidth) may permit a highly energy-efficient operation, which may make the memory system suitable for portable devices and other devices where energy efficiency and performance per unit of energy expended are key attributes," the company said in its filing.

Read more