|  04-27-2010, 11:06 PM | #211 | ||
| Wizard            Posts: 2,259 Karma: 175640 Join Date: Nov 2009 Location: Brisbane Australia Device: Sony PRS-600 | Quote: 
 The 'home & castle' example was meant to make a point - I still believe that corporations can impose rules - within the law - to anyone entering their plane. And to misbehave on the plane is rude. That's all. If you want a legal discussion about corporations, I'm out cos that is not what I intended, nor interested in at this stage - and not being a lawyer makes it rather difficult for me anyway. Quote: 
 You took it and dragged the corporations and their behaviour into the mix - sure I might have used some not so great examples but I still think they were sufficient to make my point (I didn't intend to go to court with them). You have so far said nothing that would convince me to not switch off my device. If I am being asked to switch it off I will - no reason to make trouble or being rude. And I didn't say that YOU are being rude to the flight attendant. I just said that not following their instructions / request is rude. | ||
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|  04-27-2010, 11:15 PM | #212 | 
| Banned            Posts: 2,094 Karma: 2682 Join Date: Aug 2009 Device: N/A | 
			
			The "home and castle" example is really quite specific, and has an absolutist and bluntly sexist meaning. And the grounds they can refuse you on are entirely relevant when the claim is about their having an absolute right to refuse service, as you stated. To now go back and state "within the law" is evading the point. You brought up the entire issue, and now I'm going to press it, because you're evading. Calling for unqualified rights to refuse service is not nice, and while I'm certainly not accusing you of being a member of one yourself...but it's the casual usage of that type of language which encourages the "social groups" (like, oh, the BNP) who want it back! (Unless you are of course, in which case Kish Mein Touchess) And again, I don't know who the HECK you're talking to with the flight attendant nonsense, it's annoying seeing it in your posts as if you were. And you bitched about politeness! I never suggested I would be, so you cannot possibly be referring to me. | 
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|  04-28-2010, 05:07 AM | #213 | |
| The Introvert            Posts: 8,307 Karma: 1000077497 Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: United Kingdom Device: Sony Reader PRS-650 & 505 & 500 | Quote: 
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|  04-28-2010, 05:30 AM | #214 | ||
| The Introvert            Posts: 8,307 Karma: 1000077497 Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: United Kingdom Device: Sony Reader PRS-650 & 505 & 500 | Quote: 
 Physics law? We have already followed blindly(that is what you advise us to do) one law. You cannot fly when there is a volcanic ash in the air. Look where it got us. You cannot imagine the level of disruption it caused to Europe and how many people suffered, just because we blindly followed a law created who knows how many years ago when people understood much less of the nature of the volcanic ash and if it not enough, then the law imposed by people who generally have no clue about science. We were just courteous and meekly complied. The same applies to switching off mobile phones or even worse, ebook readers that essentially stay on anyway, even though you press power button. As Lo Zeno said: Quote: 
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|  04-28-2010, 06:24 AM | #215 | 
| Opsimath            Posts: 12,344 Karma: 187123287 Join Date: Mar 2009 Location: Chiang Mai, Northern Thailand Device: Sony PRS-650, iPhone 5, Kobo Glo, Sony PRS-350, iPad, Samsung Galaxy | 
			
			Fifteen pages of people arguing if they should obey the law or not. Unbelievable.    I wonder how many of the people arguing for keeping their electronic devices ON actually DO keep them on when flying but keep them hidden from the cabin crew? Stitchawl | 
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|  04-28-2010, 07:02 AM | #216 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 9,707 Karma: 32763414 Join Date: Dec 2008 Location: Krewerd Device: Pocketbook Inkpad 4 Color; Samsung Galaxy Tab S6 | Quote: 
 I didn't "turn off" my BeBook Mini. I didn't really hide it neither. I just never took it out of my bag. It was locked. When I was asked to turn off my digital camera (no phone, or anything, simply a camera), I turned it back on once the stewardess was seated for landing. I would never use my phone, nor turn it on a plane, unless it has a flight modus. Then I would turn it off when asked and turn it on when allowed again. | |
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|  04-28-2010, 07:10 AM | #217 | |
| The Introvert            Posts: 8,307 Karma: 1000077497 Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: United Kingdom Device: Sony Reader PRS-650 & 505 & 500 | Quote: 
 However, I always read on my Sony Reader during take off or landing, unless stewardess asks me to turn it off. Sometimes, they see me reading but say nothing, while they ask other people to switch off other types of gadgets. I believe some of them know about futileness of blanking off eInk screen   | |
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|  04-28-2010, 07:33 AM | #218 | |
| Evangelist            Posts: 439 Karma: 2248782 Join Date: Aug 2009 Location: Austria Device: Inkbook Prime; Icarus Illumina;ImcoV6l;EB600;Kobo | Quote: 
 And why do they stay on all the time? Isn't that a waste of battery? I'm quite certain my eBook is off when I turn it off. | |
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|  04-28-2010, 07:38 AM | #219 | |
| Opsimath            Posts: 12,344 Karma: 187123287 Join Date: Mar 2009 Location: Chiang Mai, Northern Thailand Device: Sony PRS-650, iPhone 5, Kobo Glo, Sony PRS-350, iPad, Samsung Galaxy | Quote: 
  Only 12 pages of people arguing if they should obey the law or not. Unbelievable.  Stitchawl   | |
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|  04-28-2010, 07:41 AM | #220 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 7,452 Karma: 7185064 Join Date: Oct 2007 Location: Linköpng, Sweden Device: Kindle Voyage, Nexus 5, Kindle PW | Quote: 
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|  04-28-2010, 08:41 AM | #221 | ||
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 9,707 Karma: 32763414 Join Date: Dec 2008 Location: Krewerd Device: Pocketbook Inkpad 4 Color; Samsung Galaxy Tab S6 | Quote: 
 Quote: 
 (the reason I did turn on that phone was because I wanted to use the MP3 player on it. Turned it off rather quickly and decided I never wanted a phone that also was a MP3 player... so, I only wrote it for the sake of argument... When we went this month, I turned my phone off at the airport and only turned it on when I reached my final destination, that included a car drive...) | ||
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|  04-28-2010, 09:17 AM | #222 | |
| Connoisseur  Posts: 52 Karma: 10 Join Date: Mar 2010 Device: NOne | Quote: 
  i agree!! just a common sense to all ...better think of the safetiness first.. | |
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|  04-28-2010, 10:45 AM | #223 | |
| Banned            Posts: 2,094 Karma: 2682 Join Date: Aug 2009 Device: N/A | Quote: 
 Stitchawl - So, what law precisely are you referring to? Cite. | |
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|  04-28-2010, 11:27 AM | #224 | |
| Zealot         Posts: 100 Karma: 1018 Join Date: Feb 2010 Device: enTourage eDGe | Quote: 
 If it was truly off, each page turn would require the boot time, the book load time, and then the page display time, not the page time. Even if it was at a very low power state (main ASSP off, DDR in self refresh, small uC listening for interrupts to wake everything up), the page turn rate would be too much for most people. In general, the main ASSP will be powered, clocks to unneeded systems might be shut down (depends on the ASSP vendor), CPU clock may be stopped/stalled (ARM is very good in this regard), and the DDR subsystem will be up and running. This allows for a fairly quick page turn, while getting by on a small amount of power. Your camera is like any other digital device, when it is on, and especially when you are taking pictures, it can easily leak EM interference, no different from the flight crew passing and you turning on a netbook (generally the same basic subsystem in the two). The processors, memory, display systems are very similar between a camera/netbook/PDA/ebook/cell phone. --Carl definitions: ASSP -- Application Specific Standard Product DDR -- Dual Data Rate RAM uC -- microcontroller | |
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|  04-28-2010, 11:58 AM | #225 | |
| The Introvert            Posts: 8,307 Karma: 1000077497 Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: United Kingdom Device: Sony Reader PRS-650 & 505 & 500 | Quote: 
 When you use a power button on Sony Reader (and Kindle I think), you put it into "hold" mode. It clears the screen and makes it impossible to use buttons, otherwise it keeps on running as usual. Any ebook reader, AFAIK, continues to use battery and runs in between page turns. It just doesn't need any power to keep up the text on the screen, but it needs energy to run the OS on the background, so each time time you press on the button "next page", it takes only 1 second to turn the pages vs. 40-45 seconds   | |
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