Battle Over Phones on Planes Heating Up

The future of in-flight calls draws strong opinions on both sides of the issue.

— -- Yes, you can use phones on some planes -- to an extent. It's how we got a glimpse of what it's like to sit behind the "worst person in the world" from Ryan Case.

But what if voice calls were allowed on planes? Would Case have ditched her 20,000+ followers to share her observations with a single person? Who knows, but the movement to allow calls in cabins appears to be gaining ground.

Or is that a battleground?

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They then mentioned reclining seats and they have a point because one such seat dispute in August escalated from lots of yelling to drinks thrown in faces, a diverted flight and dumped passengers.

  • From Everett, Washington: "Are you smoking crack? I don't pay high airfares to sit for 5 hours next to someone talking on their damn phone!"
  • From Chicago: "I'm begging you. PLEASE JUST DON'T."
  • Meanwhile, there's been an interesting development overseas: The European Aviation Safety Agency said it will allow airline passengers to use electronic gadgets such as phones during entire flights without being in airplane mode, which appeared to be the last regulatory hurdle facing calls in the cabin for European airlines.

    However, the airlines themselves still have the last word and some have said no.

    Which brings up another point: Why do so many speak so loudly on mobile phones? And why are the conversations so annoyingly vapid? At 30,000 feet do you really want to hear, "Hey, guess where I am?!" or, "I'm on it, boss!" Surely such momentous communications could be texted or emailed. As another FCC commenter from Brooklyn complained, flying is a "terrible experience" these days, except for one thing: "Time away from other peoples' conversations on the cell phone! Don't take that away."

    Or as the tweeting Ryan Case noted when her allegedly drunk and annoyingly loud fellow passenger disappeared into the lavatory for a while, "I forgot the joy of silence."