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Virgin Australia selects Intelsat for Inflight Wi-Fi
by Staff Writers
McLean VA (SPX) Oct 26, 2022

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Intelsat, operator of one of the world's largest integrated satellite and terrestrial network and leading provider of inflight connectivity (IFC), has been selected to provide high-speed in-flight Wi-Fi to Virgin Australia's fleet of existing 737NG aircraft and future-delivery 737MAX aircraft.

Intelsat's 2Ku satellite connectivity solution will deliver industry-leading speeds to support video streaming, web browsing, and anything else Virgin's guests want to do with Wi-Fi-enabled devices onboard their flights.

A recent survey of Virgin Australia customers indicated Wi-Fi connectivity was an important part of travel for one in three leisure travellers and almost half of the business passengers.

"We are laser focused on creating great travel experiences for our guests when they fly with Virgin Australia," said Virgin Australia Group Chief Customer and Digital Officer, Paul Jones. "We also listened to our guests, and overwhelmingly they told us that Wi-Fi was important to them."

The popular inflight feature will be complimentary for the airline's Business Class guests and Beyond and Velocity Platinum members. For all other guests, Wi-Fi access will be available for a nominal fee.

"We're going to deliver a streaming-quality, always-on, reliable inflight internet product onboard Virginia Australia's fleet of 737 aircraft," said Dave Bijur, SVP of Intelsat Commercial Aviation. "We're adding 737MAX aircraft for the first time with Virgin Australia, and they've made a technology decision that expands our relationship and will delight their guests."

The 2Ku antennas that facilitate the IFC system will be installed gradually over 18 months on more than half of the airline's fleet starting mid-December 2023.


Related Links
Intelsat
Satellite-based Internet technologies


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Texas sues Google over biometric recognition features
San Francisco (AFP) Oct 21, 2022
The US state of Texas filed a lawsuit against Google on Thursday, accusing the internet giant of harvesting large amounts of biometric data from people without their explicit consent, a claim rejected by the California-based company. The suit accuses Google of collecting "millions of biometric identifiers," such as voice and facial details, from users in Texas in violation of a state law, and profiting as a result, attorney general Ken Paxton said in a release. "Google's indiscriminate collectio ... read more

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