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HOW IN-FLIGHT WI-FI WORKS
How It Works UK
|Issue 210
This technology allows you to scroll to your heart's content while killing time at cruise altitude
Before the early 2000s, passengers aboard commercial flights were forced to rely on in-flight movies, reading paper books or cloud-watching for entertainment. At least until the internet was beamed aboard an aeroplane for the first time in 2003. WiFi’s maiden voyage was piloted by German airline Lufthansa on a Boeing 747-400. Passengers aboard this flight could access their emails and catch up on the latest news. The download speed (the rate at which data is transferred to a device) on the flight was just three megabits per second, and the upload speed (the rate a device can send data) was a mere 128 kilobytes per second. In comparison, the average download speed of American home WiFi in 2003 was around 800 kilobytes per second.
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