Row 44 wifi system




















That puts them at on this scheduled for full-fleet rollout. Cost still hasn't been set. Of course, people would prefer to pay nothing, but Southwest hasn't been consistently low-operating-cost and low-fare by guessing wrong on what people will pay. Email Delivery Receive new posts as email. Email address Daily Each post. Syndicate this site RSS Atom. They do a ton of flying over Alaska and Canada in the north as well as a great deal of relatively new flying to Hawai'i.

They also, of course, have a large Mexican network. With GoGo service ending about miles from the border of the 48 states, those flights won't have Internet when they cross the border. To make up for this, Alaska is interested in a downloaded GoGo video product where cached content can be delivered. Who the heck wants that? I mean, it's better than nothing, but it's not better than Internet access. So why did Alaska go with GoGo when Row 44 would have been a much better fit?

There are a couple things that come to mind. Sponsored Links. Southwest Airlines passengers now have something better to do on their cross-country jaunts than grip the armrests and pray that the kid behind 'em stops kicking the seat. Row 44 has partnered with Disney, Warner Brothers, Universal and Fox to create an on-demand streaming service for folks who bring their WiFi-enabled devices onboard.

You'll get a variety of archive content to watch as you cruise the friendly skies, including shows like Friends, Glee and The Office as well as big-ticket movies like Harry Potter, Avatar and Inception. Row 44's market share is paltry compared to Gogo -- which has the business of every WiFi-lovin' airline in America outside of Southwest -- but it's certainly interesting news in light of the latter's own video endeavors. Mum's the word on pricing, but we're told that the new material can be accessed "later this year.

Disney, Warner Bros.



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