Boeing Plans Internet Access for Air Travelers.
Published:
18 June 1999 y., Friday
Boeing Co. plans a new initiative to sell satellite-based services such as Internet and mobile-phone access to people on board planes. The world_s biggest aircraft maker is looking for partners to help it build the infrastructure of the high-capacity satellite system, said Ken Medlin, the vice president and general manager of Boeing_s information and communications system unit. The effort could mark Boeing_s biggest move yet into the satellite-services market, which it views as potentially lucrative yet also fraught with risks. Iridium LLC, which runs the first global satellite hand-held phone network, has sold far fewer of its phones than expected and doesn_t have the money yet to pay $800 million it owes banks on the project. Boeing will target airline passengers, business-jet owners, crews of military aircraft and others who fly regularly -- a market that Medlin estimated could eventually reach billions of dollars a year. Communicating aboard aircraft is now difficult and expensive, Medlin said. Boeing hopes to reduce the costs and make accessing the Internet aboard planes as easy as it is now in offices. Instead of paying $5 or $10 for newspapers at an airport store, he said, customers might pay to access the Internet if they could do it quickly. The project comes at a time Boeing already is investing in other large satellite projects -- notably Teledesic LLC, the so-called ``Internet in the Sky' backed partly by Microsoft Corp. Chairman Bill Gates, and Ellipso, a satellite-based mobile phone system.
Boeing has said it views the space business as one that could offer high growth to offset lower margins in its commercial-airplane business, which faces constant pressure on prices and production costs. The industry predicts communications via satellite will triple by the early part of next century, reaching $160 billion a year in sales.
Šaltinis:
Bloomberg News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
Email churn surges into the tens of billions
more »
Experts say the Nimda virus spreads through e-mail, vulnerable servers, and the Internet via open network sharing features and altered Web pages.
more »
Hackers have begun attacking Web sites connected to Afghanistan's Taliban rulers and to other Islamic nations
more »
Corporate altruism is replacing shock as some tech companies offer free services and bandwidth to businesses affected by last week's attacks.
more »
In an apparent response to terrorist attacks on America, a notorious hacker known as "Fluffi Bunni" defaced potentially tens of thousands of high-profile Web sites, replacing their home pages with a rant about religion, capitalism, and violence.
more »
U.S. consumers are more likely to revisit Web sites that are fast loading, customizable and more informative than those that offer rich media or content delivery to wireless handsets, according to research by Jupiter Media Metrix.
more »
Entertainment industry lobbyists say programmers and open-source activists should not be alarmed by a controversial proposal to embed copy-protection controls in nearly all PCs and consumer electronic devices.
more »
Homegrown instant messaging start-up Odigo, Inc. has scored a lucrative deal to develop and power "MTV Messenger", a new IM communications tool for MTV-owned Web sites in Europe.
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
A South Korean Internet portal has filed a complaint with fair trade regulators, alleging Microsoft is shutting out competition by tying a range of application software into its new Windows operating system.
more »