EU passengers will soon be able to use 5G tech on planes - London News
by IANS | Updated Dec 05, 2022

According to BBC, the European Commission ruled that airlines can offer 5G technology alongside slower mobile data on board planes.
With this, flyers will no longer be required to put their phone in flight mode, though the details of how this will be implemented remain unknown.
"Enable innovative services for people and help European companies grow," Thierry Breton, EU Commissioner for the Internal Market, was quoted as saying.
"The sky is no longer a limit when it comes to possibilities offered by super-fast, high-capacity connectivity," he added.
The deadline for member states to make the 5G frequency bands available for planes is June 30, 2023, according to the report.
This will let people use all their phone's features mid-flight - enabling calls as well as data-heavy apps that stream music and video.
Since 2008, the EU Commission has reserved certain frequency bands for aircraft, allowing some services to provide in-flight internet access, said the report.
However, this service has historically been slow because it relied on equipment to connect people via satellite between the plane and the ground.
The new system will be able to take advantage of 5G's much faster download speeds, which can reach over 100Mbps according to mobile network EE -- allowing a film to be downloaded within minutes, the report added.
Related Articles
- WhatsApp rolling out longer group subjects, descriptions on Android beta
- 90% reduction in Covid deaths after booster dose: Study
- PagerDuty CEO faces backlash after quoting Martin Luther King Jr in layoff memo
- $3.1 mn spent on privacy last year in India: Report
- Apple may launch foldable iPad with 'carbon fibre kickstand' in 2024
- Google Pixel Tablet may come with 2 dock options
- Google terminates thousands of accounts pushing Chinese disinformation
- Acer launches new laptop with latest AMD Ryzen 7000 series processor in India
- iPhone 14 Crash Detection false alarms causing problems in Japan
- Most customers don't trust organisations over their data use in AI