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Wednesday, August 20, 2008
American Expands In-Flight Internet Access
Associated Press
AP2007**FILE** An American Airlines McDonnell Douglas MD-82 aircraft gets ready to take off at the Bob Hope Airport in Burbank,
Calif. in this April 18, 2007 file photo. American Airlines parent AMR Corp. reported, Wednesday, July 18, 2007 profits were
up nearly 9 percent in the second quarter as the carrier filled more seats with passengers paying higher fares. (AP Photo/Damian
Dovarganes, file)
American Airlines expanded the availability of in-flight Internet access Wednesday, launching airborne e-mail, Web and other online services on some of its longer, nonstop flights.
The move could create a new stream of revenue as the aviation industry faces high fuel prices and other challenges, but it also could create new headaches as passengers retrieve sensitive e-mails and Web sites in confined quarters.
American (AMR) tested in-flight access on two flights on June 25. With Wednesday's launch, the airline is making service available for $12.95 per flight on its Boeing 767-200 aircraft connecting New York with Los Angeles, San Francisco and Miami. American said most flights on those routes use the 767-200.
"Today the days of being cut off from the rest of the world while in the air become history," said Jack Blumenstein, chief executive of Aircell LLC, the company providing Internet services for American and other airlines.
Several other airlines have been testing or considering in-flight services.
The system will block Internet-based phone calls, giving passengers relief from chatty seatmates.
However, American and other U.S. airlines have said they will not filter sites based on their content, raising the prospect of passengers surfing pornography with kids nearby. Airlines say they already have general policies to address unruly passengers, and those would apply as they do now to passengers who browse adult magazines.
Less clear is how executives reading corporate e-mail containing confidential information will fend off snooping eyes.
FOX Translator
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A specialist is a member of a stock exchange who works as an auctioneer for a specific stock and/or stocks. It can be an individual, partnership, corporation or group of firms.
The specialist works to maintain a "fair and orderly market" for respective stocks, matching up buyers and sellers by displaying the best "bid" and "ask" prices at its trading post. If buys are not equal to sells, the specialist evens the scale by buying or selling shares, accordingly. However, they cannot make their own transactions until all investor orders have been placed.
Gauging supply and demand, the specialist sets an opening price for the stocks in its domain. If a price has not been set by the time the market opens, the specialist can delay that particular stock's opening.
Specialists make money off the "spread," which is the difference between bid and ask prices on orders.






