A weekly ode to the joys of moaning about your holidays.
This column may come back to haunt me, but as is trendy to say these days, at least I'll know I was "speaking my truth". And "my truth" in 2018 is that I don't want Wi-Fi on planes. Stop telling me how awesome your airline is with its fancy new on-board Wi-Fi, because for the past half a dozen years or so, flying has been one of the few times I've been forced to turn my phone off. It's been such a relief, but those days of blessed compulsory detachment from the small screens in our pockets are numbered.
So yes, technology is advancing and having to do without your phone at 35,000 feet is becoming a thing of the past. Given my phone addiction and a lack of self-control, the loosening of rules regarding devices on planes is cause for anxiety. And yet we're all meant to think it's great!
So great, it would seem, that Qantas has announced it is doing away with in-flight music on domestic routes with the axe possibly hanging over international services too. The reasons boil down to a couple of intertwined factors: (a) only 10 per cent of Qantas customers listen to the in-flight music; and (b) if people do want music, they are listening to it on their own devices.
For a start, I would've thought 10 per cent was actually a reasonable number. Given in-flight music is competing with all the other seat-back options such as movies, TV shows and computer games, isn't 10 per cent for the music a decent chunk? Especially when you add all the other possibilities to pass the time — looking out the window, eating, reading, sleeping and talking to the stranger next to you with the bad case of halitosis.