plane connected
The Weekly Round-Up: 03.07.09
Round-Up There's a bit in the original Transformers movie (the Round-Up accidentally saw half of it recently on a plane before the gin and tonics kicked in) where some kind of space-alien doohickey is used to turn everyday... [03 Jul 2009]
Delay of Intrusion Detection in Wireless Sensor Networks
White Paper They model their network using a supercritical percolation model on the plane, implying the existence of a unique unbounded connected component, and they assume that the sink belongs to this component. [23 Apr 2009]
The Weekly Round-Up: 30.01.09
Round-Up Up to now, one of the few places perfect for getting work done (as far as the Round-Up is concerned) was on a plane. Also, that means nobody will be forced to listen to the inevitable "I'm on the plane. [30 Jan 2009]
Photos: Heathrow's T5 tech ready for take-off
Photo By putting the tech right by the plane any last minute changes, such as removal of baggage, can be managed more efficiently. The desk includes a phone connected to the terminal's high capacity IP network... [12 Feb 2008]
FAA: Boeing's Dreamliner to cause "security vulnerabilities"
News The 787, which seats up to 381 passengers, is set to become Boeing's second most popular plane after the 737 with almost half of Qantas's 51 orders from Boeing made up of 787s. The report said: "It allows new kinds of... [07 Jan 2008]
Dear silicon.com... work and play, mobiles on planes, data leaks...
Comment I'm on the plane. When at home or work it's connected to the network keeping in sync. What's got silicon.com readers reaching for their keyboards this week? Reader Comments of the Week showcases how our... [25 Oct 2007]
Photos: Technology at the heart of Terminal 5
Photo Above, a British Airways plane passes the new Terminal 5 at Heathrow. The sheer scale of the project from an IT perspective is clear with 180 IT supplier contracts, 2,103 PCs, 163 systems and 9,000... [17 Jul 2007]
Surfing at 30,000ft - how it works
News This story was written on Connexion's plane to demonstrate in-flight internet connections with a notebook containing a 1.6GHz Banias chip from Intel. The plane circled the San Francisco airport for close... [07 Feb 2003]