The fledgling in-flight broadband market is set for serious growth this year, according to analyst house In-Stat, which predicts the number of Web-enabled aeroplanes will surge from 25 in 2008 to some 800 by the end of this year.
In-Stat estimates there will be more than 200 million in-flight broadband connections annually by 2013, with the long-haul connections dominating.
Meanwhile on the gadget front, laptops and netbooks will generate more connections than handheld devices such as smartphones--accounting for about two-thirds and one-third respectively.
The analyst believes broadband-hungry airline passengers will generate more than US$49 million of revenue worldwide this year, expanding to more than US$1 billion annually by 2012.
But despite the market gaining momentum the analyst said challenges to growth still remain--not least the sickly worldwide economy.
Back in January, British Airways announced plans to launch an in-flight wireless service later this year--for e-mail, Internet browsing and SMS, on an all-business-class route from London City airport to New York JFK.
Natasha Lomas of Silicon.com reported from London.











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