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Wireless Networking The Internet

Free Wi-Fi Is On Its Way To American Airlines (axios.com) 26

American Airlines announced today that it will add free in-flight Wi-Fi starting in 2026. However, Axios notes you'll need to be an AAdvantage member (American's loyalty program) to access it. From the report: American is partnering with AT&T to introduce free WiFi in January. It will be available on about 90% of the airlines' fleet, which will be planes equipped with Viasat and Intelsat high-speed satellite connectivity, per a press release. More than 500 of the airlines regional planes are expected to have high-speed WiFi capabilities by the end of the year.

Free Wi-Fi Is On Its Way To American Airlines

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  • I flew with them a couple days ago and they already had an option to watch an ad and get free wifi. Cool that they'll let you do it "ad free" but they'll probably just make you watch an ad before you can get to that menu like the ads they put before movies.

    • by darkain ( 749283 )

      Airlines do this all the time. Various companies will sponsor "free wifi" for a period of time in order to force ads at you before you can use it.

      Sounds like the new thing wont be time limited anymore?

    • Just a data grab, like the hotels. It's good to know every tiny effing thing about your customer. The data business is now a self fulfilling promise, and end in itself. Plus look how nice we are to make it free! Great optics for the Orwellian opportunity.
      • You fucking people will bitch about ANYTHING!

        • So.. do registrations suck or do they not?

        • by mjwx ( 966435 )

          You fucking people will bitch about ANYTHING!

          You sound surprised by this. What's life like under that rock?

          I suspect, in my cynical way, that this will just be an upsell... We'll give you "free" wifi that will be slow as dogshit in mid-December Scotland or you can pay a "low low price" to get a slightly faster version. Not like airlines don't have form for this.

          Besides, I'm old and curmudgeony, why do people need internets on a flight? Use the time to disconnect and relax. Read a book, watch a movie, play a game if your seat has enough space.. S

    • I flew with them a couple days ago and they already had an option to watch an ad and get free wifi. Cool that they'll let you do it "ad free" but they'll probably just make you watch an ad before you can get to that menu like the ads they put before movies.

      Regional or Mainline (and domestic or international), and what aircraft? AA has, in the past, had differences based on the details of the aircraft, due to historical installations of equipment on the aircraft (and I have experienced equipment (aircraft) swaps that upended what was expected due to those differences). If the goal is to make things consistent, I will be all for it.

  • by jacks smirking reven ( 909048 ) on Tuesday April 15, 2025 @10:57PM (#65309277)

    It was a very 2000s to 2010s feature that we've all seen whittle away with hosted video and that will continue. A big reason I can see airlines giving this for free is they can really eliminate the screens now which are probably a maintenance nightmare and planes have lifetimes of 20+ years.

    Just give people a power socket and some of that internet and they'll be set, and I'm here for it.

    • Not necessarily. Delta (and maybe others) let you control the seat back screen with your phone.

      • Yeah Delta's are definitely the nicest but I wonder how many new planes will ship with that if in flight internet is reliable, not saying they're gonna rip them out but over the next 5-10 years they will decline out as aircraft get replaced. You see them in use less and less at least in my past years flying, usually just see the map up.

    • by brad0 ( 6833410 )
      Seat screens will not be going away. They have just gotten bigger and better over the years.
      • Yeah for sure (although some, like the OG Jetblue fleet are getting quite worn) I am just saying that trend will be phased out if inflight internet is available.

    • It was a very 2000s to 2010s feature that we've all seen whittle away with hosted video and that will continue. A big reason I can see airlines giving this for free is they can really eliminate the screens now which are probably a maintenance nightmare and planes have lifetimes of 20+ years.

      Just give people a power socket and some of that internet and they'll be set, and I'm here for it.

      This has been the AA way for some time. No seat back screens (and the weight required, which means fuel, which means money), as they believe most customers will have a personal electronic device, and will be sufficiently happy to either play/stream what they brought, or use the on-aircraft wifi provided audio/video content. They are likely right at least some of the time. I know I always download more than enough content to keep myself entertained on AA flights (although do look to see if any entertainme

      • Yeah I think it's just a matter of bandwidth, once this is at the point where the wifi on the plane is close or equal to the wifi in the airport then 97.2% of people's needs are met and the rest brought books.

    • One of the best things I've ever seen was on a Pegasus airlines flight out of Turkey. Low cost budget airline so of course no screens. But what it DID have was a tablet clip. The clip was also adjustable, the guy next to me had his phone clipped in it, I had my Surface Pro clipped in and we watched our own stuff.

      Of course that was back in the days before Enshittification where Netflix still allowed you to download movies for offline watching on your device.

      Anyway going on holidays next week and for the firs

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      It was a very 2000s to 2010s feature that we've all seen whittle away with hosted video and that will continue. A big reason I can see airlines giving this for free is they can really eliminate the screens now which are probably a maintenance nightmare and planes have lifetimes of 20+ years.

      Just give people a power socket and some of that internet and they'll be set, and I'm here for it.

      Airframes have lifespans measured in decades, cabins tend to be measured in years. Most cabins are refitted about every 8 years or so, so IFEs tend to be designed to last that long.

      Budget airlines have been getting rid of seat back screens for years because it saves a few pennies and a few grams. Less about maintenance as they're not an expensive item to maintain.

      This is more about AA marketing than cost savings. They've already taken the seat back screens out of their narrowbodies although they're st

  • Newsflash (Score:4, Informative)

    by Slashythenkilly ( 7027842 ) on Tuesday April 15, 2025 @11:50PM (#65309313)
    It isnt "free" if you have to pay to access it.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Why is this modded informative? The only requirement is that you join their frequent flyer program, which is itself free to join.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Anyone know how to automatically start a torrent server the instant it enters international airspace? Asking for a friend.

  • Unfortunately it doesn't seem to apply to international flights (which I take the most). International mostly uses Panasonic, which wasn't a partner for T-Mobile's free wifi either. It's $25 or $30 for wifi, and very spotty and slow. That being said, I have been on a couple AA international flights recently that were upgraded to Viasat, and there they were charging I think $10 or 800 miles.

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