Skip to content

Biting the hand that feeds IT

The Register ®

Comms:


Related Whitepapers

[Print][Mobile][Alerts]

France to roll out Wi-Fi on high-speed train lines

Internet access à grand vitesse

Published Tuesday 14th October 2003 11:56 GMT

French national rail company SNCF will from Friday offer passengers Wi-Fi access on two major 300kmph services in a year-long trial of the technology.

Wireless Internet access will be provided on SNCF's Paris-Bordeaux and Bordeaux-Pau TGV (Train à Grand Vitesse) high-speed rail links. The service will commence on 17 October.

Travellers without Wi-Fi enabled PDAs or laptops will be able to rent kit from SNCF during their journey. SNCF hasn't said how much it will charge for notebook rentals ahead of the launch on Friday. Nor has it said how much it will charge for access to its WLAN, or how the service will be billed - per trip, per hour or some other timespan.

However, it is known that the service will be accompanied by pay-per-view access to eight online media channels provided by French news aggregation service Makkina. Channels will focus on French and international news, sport, business, and local information about the train's destination.

The wireless infrastructure has been put in place by IBM. The trial will be used to determine demand for the service and get a feel for what kinds of information users will want to access.

In April, SNCF began offering Wi-Fi at Gare du Nord station in Paris. ®

Related Stories

Silicon Valley to get US' first Wi-Fi train
GNER to spend £1m on Wi-Fi trains
Wi-Fi gets on the right track

Track this type of story as a custom Atom/RSS feed or by email.
Previous Article Next Article
whitepaper title

Enabling the Data Center Metamorphosis

This independent analyst paper gives real world advice on transforming your datacenter into a streamlined, dynamic, liquid engine capable of handling growth..
whitepaper title

Gartner Paper: US Data Centers - The Calm Before the Storm

U.S. enterprise data centers face considerable space and energy constraints over the next few years. Download this free independent report to read more..
Whitepapers Jobs

Top 20 storiesAll The Week’s HeadlinesArchiveSearch