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18 Comments
- phildalegend101, on 07/06/2009, -2/+12video is down already? well done aol
- superkendall, on 07/06/2009, -0/+10Sorry man, even guys with pacemakers have to turn 'em off during flights. You know the slightest electrical impulse could send the plane down!
- ElAmo, on 07/06/2009, -3/+12aol...really?
buried. - boozedrinker, on 07/06/2009, -1/+5Much like IE, AOL is a part of the internet that people aren't forgetting about fast enough.
- lostngone, on 07/06/2009, -0/+4Cool, so now that they are approved as medical devices does this mean I don't have to turn it off during take-off and landing of a flight as long as I have a doctors note?
- inferno10, on 07/06/2009, -1/+4Servers running on 56k modems can only handle so much traffic
- PsychoDadd, on 07/06/2009, -0/+2Link to original video:
http://www.cnbc.com/id/15840232?play=1&video=1 ... - gllopc, on 07/06/2009, -1/+3Be damned my prostate should doctors ever choose an iPhone over their own finger.
- mechnoch, on 07/06/2009, -1/+3Confirmed. Digg Bar Fail.
- Pardis, on 07/06/2009, -0/+2Without the video to verify, it could be talking about the AirStrip OB* Application.
* http://sanantonio.bizjournals.com/sanantonio/stori ... - deslock, on 07/07/2009, -0/+1Why are people digging this down? From the Airstrip web site, it was released for those platforms first even.
FTFA:
"Airstrip is available on other smartphones like Blackberry and Windows Mobile devices..." - fryke, on 07/06/2009, -0/+1Yeah, dude, it's like just tune in to 900 MHz for standard GSM and you can listen to all the phone conversations at the same time. Dude.
- yabos, on 07/07/2009, -0/+1You're an idiot and obviously have no idea how planes or radio communication works. Some cell phones can cause the GSM clicking sounds to be heard on the airplane intercom but that's really only if they're close to the headsets. In the airplane cabin cell phones don't cause any significant amount of interference to the plane's instruments or radio communication to the control towers. This has been proven even on MythBusters, and is obviously true since some airlines are installing mini cellular base stations inside planes.
- Suzilla, on 07/06/2009, -1/+1Doctors! Spend more time on the golf course, less time ... doctoring!!
Great invention. - mk2ja, on 07/06/2009, -2/+2I think you just have to close the Digg Bar. That's all I did and then it played just fine.
- oo7evan, on 07/06/2009, -3/+3This software also runs on Blackberry's and Windows Mobile smartphones. But I guess iPhone gets all the attention.
- kamikaze134, on 07/06/2009, -3/+2I came across this only minutes after it was submitted...video was down then too.
- 123bucklemyshoe, on 07/06/2009, -7/+2No haha don't keep it on it's actually not the iPhone's fault though the thing is sometimes pilots don't understand how to operate the airplane the best way so they get confused between the signal from the iPhone and the air traffic controller for example they hear your iPhone conversation instead of the air traffic controllers because they program their signal reception the wrong way once in a while even though it's kind of obvious which one is the cellphone but sometimes they make a mistake and such so I wouldn't keep your iPhone on that would be bad. Thanks for the comment though.


What is Digg?