According to Lehman's statement

by ljcqaaaq on 2009-11-23 17:18:54

Making phone calls and sending emails on airplanes is no longer a dream. Yesterday, the reporter learned that Continental Airlines has started to introduce a new cabin seat system, which is expected to be introduced into its aircraft next summer. It will be first used on Asian flights from Shanghai to New York and vice versa. Meanwhile, domestic airlines such as Air China have also introduced similar seat systems in their planes, which will be first put into use on domestic flights. By then, business travelers can maintain uninterrupted communication in the air and watch the live TV broadcast of the Shanghai World Expo through the new system. According to the person in charge of Continental Airlines, the carbon fiber reinforced company, unlike the old aviation seats, passengers in the new Shanghai-Kunming seat system can enjoy separate systems. The TV programs played in the cabin can also be live broadcasts. That is to say, during the Shanghai World Expo next year, passengers will have the opportunity to watch the live TV broadcast of the World Expo on board. "The new seat system in the business class will also provide power outlets for smartphones, allowing passengers to make phone calls during the flight," said the person in charge of the Continental Airlines region. Due to the lack of signal in the air, using computers to surf the internet in the air is currently not possible, but the new seat system is seeking technical support to ensure that passengers can send emails. In this way, business travelers can fully utilize the time of being "flying in the air" to handle their work at hand. The reporter learned that apart from Continental Airlines, domestic airlines such as Air China have also introduced similar seat systems in their planes, which will be first put into use on domestic flights. According to the promotion plan of the airlines, these new seat systems will be first introduced into the first-class or business-class cabins of hot flights and then gradually promoted. A transatlantic flight by US Airways was forced to make an unscheduled landing on June 16 due to a passenger causing a disturbance. The plane continued to its destination after the troublemaker was arrested. Flight 728 of US Airways was flying from Philadelphia, USA to London, the capital of the UK. Since the pilot believed that the troublemaking passenger posed a threat to flight safety, it was decided to land early at Boston Logan International Airport in the USA to remove that passenger. Logan International Airport spokesperson Phil Oren德拉 said that the troublemaker was named John Alexander Murray, from Glasgow, Scotland, aged 50. Soon after the plane landed at Logan International Airport, Murray was arrested on suspicion of interfering with the crew's work. The plane took off again two hours later to head to its destination. Murray was still in custody on the morning of the 17th. Whether he would be prosecuted was still unclear. Spokesperson Todd Lehmacher of US Airways told Associated Press reporters that the pilot "for safety reasons" decided to land in Boston to expel Murray. Neither Orendra nor Lehmacher specified how Murray caused trouble on the plane. However, according to Lehmacher, it did not seem like a terrorist threat.