My problem is trying to deal with the irresponsible person who thinks they are doing nothing wrong.There is a 3rd option. I (as a responsible person) can do it. If it disturbs anyone, I am more than happy to stop if asked/advised to by the FA. I will always comply to an FA's instruction, even a fellow passenger if what I am doing is disturbing them. Being 6ft9in tall and 175kg means I'm usually at the pointy end of the plane and therefore they don't really seem to have a problem with it (or they're intimidated by my size lol)
So is anything on a person's laptop allowed? I am not sure nudity is OK. I once witnessed someone in the T2 Qantas lounge using the lounge desktops to access his email and view JPGs of nude models. Not a good sight if there are children allowed and should not be allowed on an airplane either as there are children everywhere.An example of this is where someone on my LA-SYD flight was watching Game of Thrones and there was quite a bit of nudity/violence. Should he be banned from using his laptop because he has the ability to deal with offensive material?
This thread has been about what it means when the FA/FO/Cap'n says to put it in flight mode and turn it off.
This is obviously so that if you turn it on (to use it in-flight), then it will not start communicating/using its communication abilities.
I personally have a different opinion, it involves Bluetooth Headphones and one ear on and one ear off during take-off/landing (so that I can hear and I do listen/pay attention to the crew during the safety announcement).
The concept of not being able to use electronic devices on planes is silly, if not stupid. A little iPod Shuffle, even an iPhone/iPad, even a laptop with wifi, a device with bluetooth, or a GPS Receiver (because you have to be a satellite to broadcast) is in no way shape or form going to affect any other electronic devices on an aircraft. If that were the case, a terrorist or saboteur could very easily "turn on their laptop" and the plane goes down. I think not.
I'm sorry but calling the button an "off" button does not tell you how to turn it off. Many buttons on modern devices have multiple uses. Take an iPhone for example, the instructions from the manufacturer specifically say to press and hold the "sleep/wake" button (oh no it's not an off button ) to turn off the device.
iPhone, iPad, iPod touch: Turning off and on (restarting) and resetting
It is pretty simple, pushing the button once is not turning it off.
But your noise cancelling headphones are an electronic device in their own right, even plugged into the armrest or plugged into nothing at all. I had a flight attendant point this out to me once.
No doubt pretty much the same electronic devices as the pilots have on before, during and after the flight!
It's not "simple" and I wasn't really attempting to flame bait the threat. I was actually asking a genuine question. I note the page you have linked to describes the process as "restarting" and doesn't really offer a clear definition of "OFF" either. I'm willing to accept that a full shutdown is a reasonable definition if you want to argue it but it's not a particularly consistent one unless you're also arguing every laptop should be "shut down" and not merely closed or sent into hibernation too.
Your laptop analogy is not really relevant. Does the laptop play music, for example, in hibernation mode.
Yes it does. My laptop will do the exact same thing if you set it to play music and close the lid.
So it's not turned off then. It really isn't that hard to understand the difference between "off" and "standby". No need to confuse the issue by thinking too hard about it.
As long as the screen is not on, it is OFF, as far as I am concerned.So is a laptop with the lid shut OFF or in Standby?
As long as the screen is not on, it is OFF, as far as I am concerned.
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It's hilarious how much some people on here want to have the rules enforced even when FAs don't care.
Obviously some (most) FA's do care but it's irrelevant what the FA's think anyway. If the FA's designed the planes there would likely be no seat belts or oxygen masks but lots of space for makeup application...