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2008-06-16
, 22:59
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Posts: 481 |
Thanked: 65 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ Westcountry, UK
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#2
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2008-06-16
, 23:01
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Posts: 204 |
Thanked: 29 times |
Joined on May 2008
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#3
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2008-06-16
, 23:15
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Posts: 1,213 |
Thanked: 356 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ California and Virginia
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#4
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watch videos stored on them on the seat-back televisions
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2008-06-16
, 23:28
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Posts: 481 |
Thanked: 65 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ Westcountry, UK
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#5
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Depends on the connector. Is it an Apple Dock connector or a USB Connector that you plug the iPod/iPhone's Cable into.
It would truly suck if the used an AppleDock connector. Talk about Isolating consumers. Not to mention more expensive than just adding a USB port to the armrest.
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2008-06-17
, 00:10
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Posts: 204 |
Thanked: 29 times |
Joined on May 2008
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#6
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Well, from an iPod point of view, it would be pretty useless adding just a USB connection, as then all you could do is charge it, but the OP said you could watch video on the seatbacks. The only way you could do that on an iPod is either a 3 pin 3.5mm lead, or the dock connector. the 3.5mm lead doesn't give you power, so I assume they are talking about the dock connector.
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2008-06-17
, 00:16
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Posts: 177 |
Thanked: 68 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
@ Phoenix
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#7
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2008-06-17
, 01:22
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Posts: 4,030 |
Thanked: 1,633 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ nd usa
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#8
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2008-06-17
, 17:14
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Posts: 481 |
Thanked: 65 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ Westcountry, UK
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#9
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My pioneer radio has a iPod connector cable or a standard USB Female cable (ie Plug in the iPod Sync Cable). Plug an iPod into either one of the cables and the radio reads the iPod just fine. Plug non-ipods into the USB and it will read them, but not use the iPod like menu functions, or read the tags correctly.
My point is: it doesn't take a dock connector to do it, just a USB port and the owner needs his/her iPod cable, assuming the software in the airplane is designed to read iPods correctly.
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2008-06-17
, 18:40
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Posts: 4,930 |
Thanked: 2,272 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
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#10
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>>United Airlines is trying to win back some goodwill after deciding to charge passengers $15 for checking a bag (and $25 for the second one). Today, the airline said it's the first U.S. carrier to connect Apple iPods and iPhones to its in-flight entertainment system. You can charge them at your seat and watch videos stored on them on the seat-back televisions.<<
I guess we connect too?