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Dial M for mobiles August 16, 2008 As I read more and more about how mobile phones are going to become a reality on flights, the more I am filled with absolute dread. Mobile etiquette in India is already non-existent; people think nothing of leaving their phones on or holding a long, loud conversation during plays, films and other public shows. There is a desperation with which people switch on their mobiles the moment a plane touches the ground (and in an alarming number of instances, well before it touches the ground) which never fails to amaze me. I have seen more than one fed-up air hostess plead with more than one stubborn passenger, who simply refuses to put off his/herphones at take-off time, almost as if their life depended on it. I have even witnessed one passenger who switched on his phone mid-flight to show some pictures to his co-passenger. What then will happen when people can speak aboard an aircraft on their mobiles unchecked? And what will happen when in a bid to earn higher ancillary revenues, airlines make the service more and more widely available? And what will happen when the rates that allow you to talk in air on mobiles fall as precipitously as the ones that allow you to talk on the ground? I for one can't say I am at all delighted by this leap of technology. This threatens to make people's mobile phones obsession more acute than ever (I know several people who keep looking at their handset or checking it for a future message). Already, two rival companies -- OnAir (Airbus's in-flight communications provider) and AeroMobile are busy selling their equipment and signing up potential carriers and some of the leading world carriers are on board. Ryanair, Emirates, Qantas, Air Asia and Air France are some of the airlines hoping to charge -- at present -- $2.50 per minute to make calls and 50 cents for a text message. A recent article in The Economist on the subject rather simplistically concludes -- based on trials done by Aeromobile on some Emirates flights -- the phenomenon may not be as annoying as some people think. But I don't see why not. Will there be no-talking zones on flights, somewhat akin to no-smoking zones in restaurants and bars? What happens if an ailing passenger -- who needs some quiet -- finds himself next to one who simply must clinch some deal during the flight? Or if one is hoping to catch a short nap on the flight before an important meeting on one of those nightmarishly early flights? I have been told on more than one flight that I clearly don't have any children of my own (after I have patiently borne two hours of loud, steady wailing in my ears) on asking parents -- politely -- to try some, new innovative method of silencing their wailing brats. So, when mobile phones become the norm rather than a novelty, I risk being banned from flights for having tried to strangle more than one of my fellow passengers. Dial M for Murder. Powered by More Guest Columns | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||