By Graeme Wearden, 27 April 2006 08:45
NEWS
Train operator GNER has accelerated the rollout of wi-fi networks on its rolling stock, after seeing strong demand for the service.
GNER announced on Wednesday that 21 of its 41 trains now offer wireless internet access. The company had been aiming to upgrade the whole fleet by May 2007 but now plans to finish the job nine months ahead of schedule, in August this year.
According to GNER, which runs services down the east side of the UK, this will make it the first UK train operator to offer a fully wi-fi-enabled service.
GNER chief executive Christopher Garnett said in a statement: "For a business user, wi-fi creates a truly mobile office, while leisure users can shop, keep up to date with news and sport or book a weekend break at the end of their journey."
While GNER's wi-fi is free for those travelling in first class, other passengers will have to pay. Like most commercial wireless services, GNER's offering is much more expensive than using a standard internet café: 30 minutes of access costs £2.95, an hour costs £4.95 and two hours costs £9.95.
Graeme Wearden writes for ZDNet UK

Comments
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1. anonymous
Well done GNER a great service. Why dont Virgin and the other companies get wifi on their trains as quickly?
A service that works is what we like. Obvioulsy the supplier Icomera knows what its doing.