Voip during flights
Anyone experience using voip during their flight? I know a guy who used a voip app called Fongo on his flight and it worked. Any experiences?
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Please god, no.
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I've tested VOIP over Boingo by discretely running a couple of echo tests using various services. I really don't recommend it.
While Boingo blocks most services (you connect to the services but they mess with the SIP packets) within ten seconds of the connection, you can VPN around it (don't use PPTP). It really turns on the bandwidth consumption of the other passengers. Then you have a ton of background noise and basically have to talk into the palm of your hand to avoid drawing attention. People on the other side of the call will tell you to speak up and you really can't. Remember you are violating a dozen different regulations making the call. You basically need a window seat, the earbud mike in the palm of your hand and talk into the window. Alternatively, you need to have a friend in the next seat who will tolerate your activity and pretend you are conversing with them. At the end of the day, it rarely works and it is not worth the hassles you will get. I stick to text messaging. While you could sneak off a two minute call, you can also get the message across via text messaging and via email. For Americans, I recommend a free Google Voice account for a text messaging number; for Canadians, TextPlus gives you a free Canadian number which you can text with to any Canadian mobile phone (and US ones). |
In the name of all that is holy, please do not.
Air travel is miserable enough as it is. Don't add to the misery. Just don't. |
I've used FaceTime Audio on a flight, just to see if it worked. My seatmate never realized I was speaking to anyone.
The whole "misery" concern is hypothetical and it fails to hold in practice. Jet engine noise drowns out normal conversation volume. I'm younger than most on this forum but I still remember seatback Airfones. |
Originally Posted by robroy90
(Post 24209608)
In the name of all that is holy, please do not.
Air travel is miserable enough as it is. Don't add to the misery. Just don't. |
Originally Posted by davie355
(Post 24212122)
I've used FaceTime Audio on a flight, just to see if it worked. My seatmate never realized I was speaking to anyone.
The whole "misery" concern is hypothetical and it fails to hold in practice. Jet engine noise drowns out normal conversation volume. I'm younger than most on this forum but I still remember seatback Airfones. The annoyance factor is real and scientifically verified. |
Airfone was fifteen cents a minute if you had a connected Verizon account.
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I've listened to conference calls via SIP over IPSec on Gogo. The audio quality is fine. I have never tried talking however.
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Originally Posted by davie355
(Post 24212122)
I've used FaceTime Audio on a flight, just to see if it worked. My seatmate never realized I was speaking to anyone.
The whole "misery" concern is hypothetical and it fails to hold in practice. Jet engine noise drowns out normal conversation volume. I'm younger than most on this forum but I still remember seatback Airfones. Try riding on a public bus or train when someone is talking on the phone or god forbid, on a conference call so when they take a turn to talk have to scream to be heard over the other callers. I've been on a public bus when someone was yakking loudly on a phone during morning commute hours to the financial district and people on the bus started quietly asking "please get off the phone" and as the young woman kept gabbing loud and rolling her eyes, they were in her face yelling "GET OFF THE (#*%#% PHONE!"' Note to self: don't use phone with morning commuters on quiet bus. |
Originally Posted by davie355
(Post 24212122)
I've used FaceTime Audio on a flight, just to see if it worked. My seatmate never realized I was speaking to anyone.
The whole "misery" concern is hypothetical and it fails to hold in practice. Jet engine noise drowns out normal conversation volume. I'm younger than most on this forum but I still remember seatback Airfones. Yeah, normal conversational volumes. Too many stupid people out there who blare out their annoying conversations. On the ground, I can get up and leave. On a plane, I'm stuck. Airfones cost too much to be an annoyance. Rare is the person who would yap on about their colonoscopy for hours on end at $15/minute. |
I've used Lync for voice successfully many times in the air via satellite
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IF you have Tmobile and a wifi calling capable phones, you can use wifi calling onboard. Recently flew from NRT-EWR and the 777 had WIFI available for 17 bucks. I was able to call my wife back home.
Granted I was sitting in BF and had an empty seat next to me and I wasn't bothering anyone. |
Originally Posted by davie355
(Post 24212122)
I've used FaceTime Audio on a flight, just to see if it worked. My seatmate never realized I was speaking to anyone.
The whole "misery" concern is hypothetical and it fails to hold in practice. Jet engine noise drowns out normal conversation volume. I'm younger than most on this forum but I still remember seatback Airfones. |
Originally Posted by bryanlee81
(Post 24281899)
IF you have Tmobile and a wifi calling capable phones, you can use wifi calling onboard. Recently flew from NRT-EWR and the 777 had WIFI available for 17 bucks. I was able to call my wife back home.
Granted I was sitting in BF and had an empty seat next to me and I wasn't bothering anyone. |
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