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Wednesday, 06/23/2004 9:28:19 PM

Wednesday, June 23, 2004 9:28:19 PM

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Boeing's in-flight broadband launched in Asia
Lufthansa flight 715 from Tokyo to Munich inaugurated the service


News Story by Martyn Williams

JUNE 23, 2004 (IDG NEWS SERVICE) - In-flight broadband Internet access was launched in Asia today with the takeoff of Lufthansa flight 715 from Tokyo to Munich.
The service is based on The Boeing Co.'s Connexion by Boeing offering, and its launch in Asia follows Lufthansa AG's rollout on its flight between Munich and Los Angeles last month. The service uses a wireless LAN on board the aircraft and connects through a satellite link to offer passengers a shared Internet connection with downstream capacity of 5Mbit/sec. and upstream capacity of 1Mbit/sec.

The launch of the service was announced at a Tokyo news conference, where Lufthansa and Boeing demonstrated the connectivity by holding a live video conference with Lufthansa representatives on the aircraft. "What is normal for us on the ground is becoming normal for us in the air," said Bernhardt Seiter, director of Lufthansa's Flynet service.

Lufthansa will offer the service every day on flights 714 and 715 each way between Munich and Tokyo. Users have a choice of two payment options: $29.95 for the entire flight, or $9.95 for 30 minutes of access and then a per-minute fee of 25 cents.

Passengers can also get free access to a Lufthansa portal called Flynet. The service consists of more than 1,000 pages of news and information, travel guides, Lufthansa-related content and shopping. Some parts of the portal, such as the news, are updated about once an hour during the flight.

Currently, passengers need a device such as a notebook PC or personal digital assistant to access the content, but Lufthansa is considering adding the content to the aircraft's entertainment system beginning in 2005 or 2006, Seiter said.


Later this year, the airline plans to expand the service to other flights serving Asia, including flights between Germany and Osaka, Japan, and between Germany and China, as well as on routes to India, the Middle East and Canada.

A number of other airlines are planning to begin offering the service this year. Three have signed agreements with Boeing: SAS AB's Scandinavian Airline Systems and Japan's All Nippon Airways Co. and Japan Airlines System Corp. Another four have signed preliminary agreements: British Airways PLC, Korean Air, Singapore Airlines Ltd. and Taiwan's China Airlines Ltd.

The airlines are hoping the service will provide them with a competitive advantage over rivals and say the system can help them cut costs by improving aircraft-to-ground communications. For example, aircraft maintenance information can be sent to ground crews ahead of time, reducing turnaround time for repairs.

Lufthansa said passenger take-up of the service is on target. The first route on which Lufthansa offered the service, flights 425 and 453 between Munich and Los Angeles, is seeing usage levels of about 10 to 20 passengers per flight, which is in line with the airline's expectations at this point, Seiter said.


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