From another thread
	
		
	
	
		
		
			And just how long is it supposed to take for these  plans to be put into action?  IFE is a joke, it was released nearly  1YEAR AGO, we have a new exciting IFE SOON. Seriously, Waht would be  described as soon. J class is a multitude of inconsistancey, meal  service is hit and miss, standard of product recieved is so  inconsistant, that it turns you away simply because you have no  expectation of what you will get, could be brilliant, could be cough.
Virgin are floundering, and the sooner they choose their path and follow that, the better.
		
		
	 
IFE - A "trial" in the middle of the year, which will go for a few  months, so at least another year before WiFi will be wide-spread
It's going to be years before anything decent is actually happening with VA and IFE/WiFi
Virgin Australia selects BoardConnect to keep IFE costs down | APEX Editor's Blog
Virgin Australia’s agreement with Lufthansa Systems to trial its  BoardConnect streaming IFE solution from mid-2012 on a single Boeing  737-800 comes at a critical time for the carrier as it looks to  transition from its low-cost carrier ‘LCC’ origins to a full-service  airline, but keeping costs in check to give an advantage over competitor  Qantas. Despite the carrier rolling out new lounges and business at the end  of its recent financial year, Virgin Australia’s cost base increased  only 2.4%, below the inflation rate of 3.0%. BoardConnect will give the  airline access to traditional IFE content without the costs and weight  of an embedded system. Lufthansa Systems chief information officer Dr  Jörg Liebe estimates BoardConnect on an A320 or 737 will save an airline  50% in costs and 500kg in weight over a legacy solution.
 While San Francisco-based Virgin America will use BoardConnect to  stream to passengers’ personal electronic devices as well as seat-back  monitors at every seat, Virgin Australia only plans to stream to PEDs  and possibly a small number of airline-supplied tablets, primarily for  business class. Hollywood has approved early window content for  airline-supplied devices, but not for passenger PEDs.
 A spokeswoman says the trial “allows us to fully assess the system and hopefully roll it out across the 737 fleet”.
 Virgin Australia expects to have 71 737s in operation by mid-2012,  although the solution would be limited to new aircraft and not ones due  for immediate lease returns.
 For domestic flights Virgin had offered a live television streaming service for a fee, but with unsatisfactory take up rates.
 Its long-haul 777s will keep the Red system based on Panasonic  infrastructure, which Virgin Australia’s A330s are expected to adopt  too. BoardConnect may be extended to the carrier’s Embraer 190 fleet,  but not its ATR 72 turboprop fleet.
 The bulk of the airline’s 737 trunk routes are under three hours in  duration, and the spokeswoman says installation of in seat power for  economy class “may come in subsequent phases”.
 Virgin Australia has billed this as its “first phase” of IFE plans.  Its newest 737s have SwiftBroadband, but the carrier is understood to  favour a Ka solution for connectivity needs.