I have an australian mobile broadband account with dodo using a usb modem on my laptop (using the optus 3g network)
- will this work in-flight in australia and internationally?
True enough, however with the recent QF 767 trial (and the upcoming introduction of the server across a greater proportion of the fleet - I hope) of GPRS/SMS access in-flight, your Dodo USB modem should work. Be aware though that you will effectively be paying International roaming rates for your data so if you do do it, you would want to keep it to a minimum. Additionally, I would expect to see GPRS speeds rather than 3G (UMTS or HSDP) speeds.Given you are not meant to use any telephony devices in flight unless all connectivity is switched off via some form of safe flight mode, I would think the point is moot.
There is no conclusive proof either way. There have been incidents that have been blamed on mobile phone use, but cannot be 100% proven. And various bodies have tried to prove they cannot cause problems and have not been able to be 100% conclusive.is the situation the same on a plane? i.e. is there truly any danger from someone using their mobile phone during flight?
in hospitals, there are usually signs that all mobile equipment must be turned off for fear of interfering with medical equipment - but as far as I am aware this is completely rubbish -
True enough, however with the recent QF 767 trial (and the upcoming introduction of the server across a greater proportion of the fleet - I hope) of GPRS/SMS access in-flight, your Dodo USB modem should work. Be aware though that you will effectively be paying International roaming rates for your data so if you do do it, you would want to keep it to a minimum.
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there has been plenty of research done on telephony interference with medical equipment and there is a very real risk in many types of equipment.
I have an australian mobile broadband account with dodo using a usb modem on my laptop (using the optus 3g network)
- will this work in-flight in australia...?
I can only go back to a presentation from an annual conference of the Australasian Radiation Protection Society on Potential 3G mobile handset interference to hospital medical devices in 2004.found this upto date article - it basically says mobile phones in hospital are annoying rather than dangerous
first hit on google search for "bmj Editorial mobile phones"
(i'm banned from posting weblinksas a newbie)
However, I would point out the caveat in many instancesIn many instances, no interferences effects was observed even when the dipole was brought within 1 cm of the device
The results suggest that WCDMA is unlikely to be significant interference threat when compared to 900/1800 MHz GSM or GPRS
For the the devices tested, the 'two metre rule' provides protection from GPRS and WCDMA handsets
affected by screen judder; with more powerful phones the units switched off, changed input selection, dumped their stored energy, and displayed asystole incorrectly4
in hospitals, there are usually signs that all mobile equipment must be turned off for fear of interfering with medical equipment - but as far as I am aware this is completely rubbish - 100% of hospital Dr's I know keep keep their mobile phones switched on in the hopsital (particularly if they are on-call)
is the situation the same on a plane? i.e. is there truly any danger from someone using their mobile phone during flight?