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Originally Posted by mike_asia
(Post 12767817)
Read the OP, non stop for 4 hours, not just casual conversation, It was a night flight that landed at midnight
Get earplugs. |
it's pretty annoying, but that's what noise cancelling headphones are for =D
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Originally Posted by mike_asia
(Post 12768035)
[edited by moderator to conform to other edits].
It's public transportation, not church or a library, you can't demand that every passenger conform to what you think are the ideal cabin conditions. They werent yelling, and were well within their rights. You would have been WAY out of line by telling them to be quiet. I love my peace and quite, I don't like to listen to others converstations, but that's what my noise cancelling headphones or Sures earbuds are for. Of course, I feel this way because I almost always travel alone, if I were traveling with a companion, I may want to talk to them. I feel this would be well within my rights and not inconsiderate at all. If you really want peace and quiet, charter your own flight. |
Originally Posted by mike_asia
(Post 12768035)
[moderator edit to conform to one above.]
i am pretty inconsiderate, but i know i cannot shut up the bubble heads, and the screaming kids. the ride on the train was enough. headphones do not work. good isolation ear buds do. hope you can afford them, and tolerate them in your ears. to quote the sage of the 20th c. michael nesbit while selling a neighbor nuclear deterent, "it is a well known fact, neighbors are no damned good" |
Gotta roll with it. Situations's out of your control so don't let it bother you. +1 on the suggestions for noise cancelling headphones.
I commute daily on NJ Transit trains to midtown Manhattan. I've noticed that the early morning trains are very quiet. Everyone's reading a paper, book, listening to iPod, or whatever. If someone gets on and starts gabbing, it will generate a lot of dirty looks. Some people may even get up and change their seat. On the way home, it's a different story and people are generally more verbal. Either way, life's too short. |
Originally Posted by mike_asia
(Post 12767705)
4 hour flight. I was taught that there are certain places you should be quiet.. Church, Doctors office, Elevators, Library, etc. Maybe I lived in Japan too long where people are polite on public transportation but I still think any crowded place like an airplane is not the place for 4 hours of smalltalk
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Originally Posted by mike_asia
(Post 12767429)
am i the only one that considers this rude?
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Moderator caution
Members: to keep the thread open, we need to discuss this without undue personalization of our members. As the FlyerTalk Rules tell us: "If you disagree with another member, challenge the opinion or idea - not the person." Post(s) which strayed from this rule have been edited or deleted. Ocn Vw 1K, Moderator.
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I don't think it is rude for them to have a conversation. I have been in Japan a lot too and people talk on the train, shinkansen and local trains. People talk in the elevator in Japan too.
I always travel alone and one time an older lady told a girl one row in front of her to be quiet. This was on a 12 hour all day(no night) flight from YYZ to NRT. I thought the older lady was kind of rude. Who did she think she was? She doesn't own the plane, and the volume at which the people in front of us was not by any stretch of the imagination loud or annoying. When a baby cries.. that is annoying. But no one ask the baby to stop crying. :D |
Rude!
Originally Posted by mike_asia
(Post 12767429)
am i the only one that considers this rude?
What you relate happens to me a couple of times a year, and I think it's mostly that some people don't have any idea that their voice is too loud for a sit-down environment. However, sometimes it's people with an overinflated ego who want everyone to hear what they have to say. Anyway, FWIW, I think if you are in a public setting (like a train, club, airplane cabin, etc), and there are people around you who you do not know, you should probably learn to speak in a lower voice when talking to someone seated right next to you. |
Originally Posted by 767-322ETOPS
(Post 12768439)
Gotta roll with it. Situations's out of your control so don't let it bother you. +1 on the suggestions for noise cancelling headphones.
I commute daily on NJ Transit trains to midtown Manhattan. I've noticed that the early morning trains are very quiet. Everyone's reading a paper, book, listening to iPod, or whatever. If someone gets on and starts gabbing, it will generate a lot of dirty looks. Some people may even get up and change their seat. On the way home, it's a different story and people are generally more verbal. Either way, life's too short. |
Originally Posted by portfolioflyer
(Post 12768010)
it's pretty annoying, but that's what noise cancelling headphones are for =D
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i came to this thread thinking about my second trans-atlantic flight, where i was sitting next to an army guy who was just shipping out to germany. he talked nearly non-stop - to me!
drove me crazy. he didn't get the hint, even when i visibly put my earphones on and played my walkman. |
Originally Posted by crabbing
(Post 12771807)
i came to this thread thinking about my second trans-atlantic flight, where i was sitting next to an army guy who was just shipping out to germany. he talked nearly non-stop - to me!
drove me crazy. he didn't get the hint, even when i visibly put my earphones on and played my walkman. I get irritated when people with carrying voices hold dense conversations within earshot in the plane. But the only time I ever said anything was to the guy with a radio announcer voice who drank too much coffee on a TATL red-eye. The seating was such that I really could have slept, except for my seat being jiggled and the voice that NC Shures couldn't block out. He was very nice but he wouldn't stop talking. So what can ya do? |
If you can't deal with people talking on a flight, perhaps you should look into NetJets or other, similar, service.
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