Your Kindle could finally be liberated during take-off and landing on flights in the U.S. by this time next year.
Many of us have had the experience of doing a double-take when the
flight attendant asks us to power down an e-reader, even when it's
already in airplane mode. My old-school
Kindle
isn't even backlit -- there are probably more emissions coming through
the fillings in my teeth; perhaps I should stow those under the seat in
front of me as well?
I'm guessing that might freak out the federal air marshal aboard my next flight.
But it appears that a day of reckoning is coming for the ban on
e-readers during those critical periods of a flight, you know the
take-off and landing periods when the crew members in many planes are
reviewing flight manuals on their completely legal iPads and other electronic devices in the cockpit.
According to a pair of anonymous Federal Aviation Administration and industry sources who spoke with the New York Times,
the FAA is hoping to announce by the end of the year that reading
devices will finally be allowed to stay turned on for the duration of a
flight, so long as they're in airplane mode. The rule change would
reportedly not apply to cell phones, even those super big-screened
Samsung phones -- sorry, Galaxy Note fans.
Last year, the Federal Communications Commission and the electronics and aviation industries teamed up to launch a study on the use of devices on planes. The group's findings are set to be announced this summer.
The FAA has been receiving more pressure in the last year, from Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) and members of the FCC,
among others, to re-evaluate the electronics policy, which originated
many years ago when pilots reported apparent interference with equipment
in the cockpit from wireless devices in the cabin. In the intervening
years, a plethora of new electronic devices with an even wider list of
uses and varying degrees of electronic emissions have begun to make
their way onto flights, including wearable health monitoring devices,
and e-readers.
The emergence of smart watches and technology like
Google Glass
is likely to only complicate things further and lead to more
confrontations between flight crew enforcing federal rules and
passengers making a stand against what seems increasingly like
bureaucratic nonsense.
McCaskill has said that if the FAA fails to act, lawmakers could
introduce legislation to force a change. And one day I'll read all about
it out of the corner of my eye using our Pocket app for Google Glass while taking off on a flight back to Albuquerque.
It's time to update that old song: The future's looking so bright, I've gotta order sunglass inserts.

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