Manila Bulletin

These airlines offer the best in-flight Wi-Fi – if you’re lucky

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Getting work done on a plane is all too often a case of best-laid plans. Even in the ideal scenario where the Wi-Fi works, numerous factors, from your fellow passengers to tweaks to the routing, can quickly leave you out of luck.

Traveloka, the leading travelbook­ing app in Southeast Asia, has just completed a comprehens­ive survey of tech-friendly airlines, ranking 50 internatio­nal carriers based on WiFi availabili­ty, speed, cost, and other connectivi­ty features such as in-set outlets and USB ports. According to its findings, the top three airlines to prioritize for in-flight efficiency are Qatar, Emirates, and Delta, in descending order.

Take that with a grain of salt, though.

For starters, the company’s methodolog­y focused only on the top 50 carriers in the world, as ranked by SkyTrax, whose annual list — while authoritat­ive — omits tech-friendly airlines such as United on the basis of other factors, including punctualit­y and staff friendline­ss. And while such carriers on the list as JetBlue Airways (No. 5), offer Wi-Fi consistent­ly across a majority of their fleets, others like Eva Air (No. 10) have only Wi-Fi on half their planes. According to a Traveloka spokespers­on, working around such limitation­s provides an accurate picture of the “best-case scenario” on any of these companies.

Expand the data for each of Traveloka’s winners, and you’ll see even more complexiti­es come to light. For one thing, you may notice that British Airways (No. 4) offers the fastest service in the top 10, at 20Mbps. Emirates (No. 2), Etihad (No. 9), and Eva, by comparison, are all under 2Mbps. Not great, when you’re paying upward of $14 per hour and hoping to put out an office fire.

For just that reason, Routehappy by ATPCO, an aviation data insights company that tracks in-flight amenities for every individual aircraft and cabin, has this week overhauled the way it presents its reporting on this topic.

“Airlines don’t see a choice anymore — offering Wi-Fi is a competitiv­e need. The question is more about what you can expect out of your Wi-Fi, rather than if you’ll have it at all,” says Jason Rabinowitz, the company’s director of airline research.

Now, when you search for flights on such engines as Skyscanner or Hipmunk — whose ratings on everything from meals to legroom are powered by Routehappy — you may notice new categoriza­tions for Wi-Fi service. They’ll indicate whether the service quality will be strong enough to merely check emails, support basic web searches, allow faster browsing, or even invite video streaming with services such as Netflix. (The feature will roll out gradually across several of Routehappy’s partner search engines in the coming months.)

“We’re really trying to set expectatio­ns for what passengers will be able to do on their specific flights,” explains Rabinowitz. “We want to separate the slow Wi-Fi from the faster and the fastest.” He points to US carriers Jet Blue Airways Corp., United Airlines, Inc., Delta Air Lines, Inc., and American Airlines, Inc. as the most consistent in their offerings.

There’s reason to be optimistic. “Airlines are making so many investment­s in next-generation Wi-Fi systems now, it’s almost impossible to keep up,” Rabinowitz says. “New satellites are being launched, new systems are more capable, and the connectivi­ty gaps are being filled.”

Among the good news: Improved satellite coverage over Australia and the South Pacific has brought unpreceden­ted in-flight connectivi­ty to Qantas Airways, Air New Zealand Ltd., and Virgin Australia Airlines; technologi­cally enhanced networks by Gogo, Inc., British Airways, and Deutsche Lufthansa AG are set to debut before the end of the year, raising speeds from 3G to LTE levels; and even such budget carriers as Spirit Airlines, Inc. and AirAsia Berhad are adding fast Wi-Fi to their otherwise stripped-down list of offerings. If reliable (or reliable-ish) Wi-Fi was previously the domain of US airlines, it’s now becoming a global perk. (Bloomberg)

 ??  ?? A flight attendant arranges a passenger booth in the first-class cabin aboard an Airbus SAS A380 aircraft, operated by Qatar Airways Ltd., on the opening day of the 51st Internatio­nal Paris Air Show in Paris, France. (Bloomberg file photo)
A flight attendant arranges a passenger booth in the first-class cabin aboard an Airbus SAS A380 aircraft, operated by Qatar Airways Ltd., on the opening day of the 51st Internatio­nal Paris Air Show in Paris, France. (Bloomberg file photo)

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