NEWS Wi-Fi on trains is now no longer the preserve of businesspeople with cash to spare. GNER has announced it has rolled out wireless broadband to standard as well as first-class carriages on some trains.
Until this week, Wi-Fi has only been available to the first-class traveller but due to the enthusiastic reaction from the East Coast's train users, GNER has decided to expand the service.
The first train to offer the service went live on Tuesday with a total of 10 wireless broadband-equipped trains to be in service by the end of the summer. Unlike the first-class Wi-Fi users, who get the price of using the internet thrown in with their fare, second-class passengers will have to pay between £2.95 for half-an-hour's use or £9.95 for more than three hours.
GNER will be running a helpline for first-time users to help new Wi-Fi customers get to grips with the technology.






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1. anonymous
I've just come back from a business trip where I took my car on the Hull-Rotterdam ferry. (This is a 12 hour overnight sailing.)
P & O charge £2.00 for 30 minutes or £3.00 per hour to surf the net in their Internet Zone (using their PCs and satellite technology so not WiFi) which I thought was good value for being able to check you web mail from the middle of the North Sea.