When something is free, returning to the point where you have to pay for it becomes not only a hassle, but also an excuse to criticize the service like, in this case, the airplanes that offer free Wi-Fi on board their flights. To try to prevent that from happening, several airlines are opting for Elon Musk’s Starlink to keep their customers happy.
Starlink has found its place miles above the ground
The news, part of a long list to which recently Air France announced its collaboration with Elon Musk’s satellite internet, puts on the table that collaboration with intercontinental flight companies has become, in addition to the service to users, the main source of services for Starlink and its satellites.
However, faced with the possibility of offering Wi-Fi as they did until now through more conventional services, or other satellite internet services, airlines’ bet on Starlink has become a snowball that inevitably pushes the rest to make the same bet.
Those who have joined the service say they do it because part of that investment, about $150,000 for each terminal installed on a plane, is intended to improve the service, which in a way guarantees them not only increasing coverage, but also the certainty that it will continue to improve in the future to meet that demand.
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