Of course you don't, your brain is far too frazzled by constantly having to check Facebook and emails.
According to new statistics released
this week by air industry data cruncher Routehappy, flying without
Wi-Fi access is becoming increasingly rare as more airlines connect
their customers.
This is good news for anyone who needs to Instagram their inflight meal or fabricate Twitter spats with imaginary passengers.
Bad
news for those who need to unjack themselves from the Matrix for long
enough to watch a weepy movie and re-balance their blood-Smirnoff
levels.
According
to Routehappy, there's now a 24% chance your international flight will
have Wi-Fi access. On domestic U.S. flights the odds rise to 66% -- a
figure nearly triple what it was 18 months ago.
Connection quality and speed are also improving, it reports.
"Wi-Fi
is one of the most sought-after new amenities fliers want to access on
their flights, and there has been significant investment by airlines
since our last report," says Routehappy CEO Robert Albert.
"Coverage
is starting to be meaningful on flights worldwide, along with a wide
variety of speeds, coverage availability and pricing models, including
free of charge."
Internationally,
Nordic airlines are leading the connectivity charge, with Icelandair and
Norwegian both offering Wi-Fi on more than 80% of their flights. (The
number of flights this represents isn't specified.)
The
next four -- Etihad Airways, Singapore Airlines, Lufthansa and Iberia
-- currently only supply it to between 40-60% of flights.
Aeroflot,
Emirates and Japan Airlines are in the 20-30% range, while Qatar
Airways, Thai Airways and Turkish Airlines score between 15 and 20%.
For U.S. airlines, Delta leads the game, offering Wi-Fi across more than 3,500 of its daily flights.
Routehappy doesn't offer any comparative statistics between U.S. and international operators.
Source : www.cnn.com
Source : www.cnn.com
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