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July 11th, 2006
Travel Weekly

Calling all ships: Keeping in touch
while at sea
no longer a hassle
Cruise lines may
advertise a vacation that gets away from it all, but many cruise
passengers apparently are less concerned with escaping the workaday
world than with making sure their cell phones keep them linked to
their world while at sea.
The cruise lines are getting the message. Carnival Cruise Lines said
last month it would install technology enabling guests on its 22
ships to use their own cell phones anywhere at sea.
Carnival contracted with Wireless Maritime Services, a company whose
client roster already includes Norwegian Cruise Line, Royal
Caribbean International, Celebrity Cruises and Regent Seven Seas
Cruises. With the world’s largest cruise line in the game, by next
year the majority of cruise ships around the world will have this
kind of cellular phone service.
Just two years ago, technology enabling the use of cell phones at
sea was still in a testing
phase. Rapid deployment has been the result of demand.
“Mobile phones are a fact of life,” said Rob Marjerison, general
manager of WMS. “People can’t just disappear into thin air for
a week.”
Onboard Internet connections are already as commonplace as balcony
cabins, and even wireless Internet access is increasingly an
expectation.
In 2004, NCL became the first cruise line to offer guests on North
American cruises the ability to use personal cell phones. Since
then, lines have been slower to adopt cell technology than the
Internet. But it is catching up.
Meanwhile, the $10-per-minute satellite phone seems to be going the
way of the midnight buffet.
Another maritime cellular provider, SeaMobile, is installing service
on three cruise lines this year: Silversea Cruises’ and Oceania
Cruises’ ships are already being wired, and the company signed a
contract with Crystal Cruises last month.
WMS was developed as a partnership between Maritime
Telecommunications Network, a provider of satellite connectivity to
cruise ships, and Cingular Wireless. SeaMobile recently bought
Maritime Telecommunications Network and its 49% ownership of WMS.
The technology works by having cellular antennae on ships relay
calls to an onboard base station that in turn relays them to a
satellite. The satellite then relays the call to a base station on
land that routes it through its cellular network. The service turns
on once the ship is 12 miles offshore.
Marjerison said it costs about $250,000 to outfit a ship with the
technology. The cost is borne by the communications company, which
recoups its investment by acting as a local cellular provider,
billing the passenger’s cellular provider for roaming service. The
cruise line then takes a cut of what the communications company gets
for every call, and the charges show up on the passengers’ monthly
cell phone statements.
Calls cost the passenger around $2 to $5 per minute, depending on
their own cell phone provider and, in the case of SeaMobile, on from
where the calls are placed. With Oceania’s SeaMobile service, calls
range from $1.99 per minute in Spain to $3.99 per minute in Libya.
The passengers’ cell phone providers can then tack on additional
charges, depending on the calling plan.
MSC Cruises said calls placed through its provider, GeoLink, run
about $4 to $5 per minute.
Marjerison said calls
made on ships with WMS service range from $2.49 per minute for
Cingular customers to $2.99 per minute for Sprint customers. Each
cell provider sets its own rates.
Right now, sending e-mail via a hand-held device or a text message
by phone is the best value, Marjerison said. An e-mail sent on a
BlackBerry costs only a few cents, because it is billed by its size.
Connectivity can be a selling point for travel agents.
Mary Jean Tully, CEO of Cruise Professionals in Mississauga ,
Ontario , said it is a huge relief for families to know they can
reach each other when they are away for long periods, especially if
they have aging or sick relatives. And businesspeople feel they need
to be connected.
“It used to be you were out of touch on a ship,” Tully said. “People
would say, ‘I do three or four short trips a year, because I can’t
be out of touch for that long.’
“[The technology] allows them the freedom to be able to get away.
The reason they can afford their cruise is they can check their
portfolios.”
Marjerison said that when incentive and business group travelers are
on a connected ship, they take advantage of it.
“Usage goes way up,” he said. “Business group travel is a
billion-dollar industry. That business was not a viable option to
the cruise lines. Now it is.”
Some veterans of cruise travel say that this technology is a bonus,
but not a necessity.
And some travel professionals remain skeptical.
“It’s nice, but we’ve been doing group charters for 24 years, and so
far it hasn’t stopped
people from cruising, “ said Josephine Kling, president of Landry &
Kling, a Miami-based company that specializes in corporate charters
and meetings at sea.
Kling said the technology is not a deciding factor for her clients,
but people do want to know how to communicate if necessary. The
ability to do so, she said, signals to groups that cruise lines are
up to date and offer the amenities that resorts do. But in that
regard, she said, the quality of meetings facilities remains
paramount.
Some cruise lines still hesitate to enable calls that could intrude
loudly upon other people’s
vacations.
Preston McKinney of Odyssey Travel in San Antonio has heard no
complaints from his clients so far, but he thinks phone service on
ships could become a nuisance if cruise lines don’t designate cell
phone-free areas.
“[Guests] would be very irritated if they were sitting and enjoying
fine dining and a cell phone goes off,” he said. “Also in the pool
areas because people like to sit there, relax and read.”
It is fitting that Princess, whose motto is “Escape Completely,” is
among the cruise line
holdouts.
“It’s a trade-off,” said Jan Swartz, Princess’ senior vice president
of customer service and
sales.
“There’s the convenience of passengers using their cell phones
weighed against the ancillary passenger impact. It’s all about
striking the right balance between those things.”
Princess is currently in the process of testing WSM’s service on one
of its ships, but Swartz
said the line was looking into the possibility of blocking service
in certain areas.
Marjerison said that WMS can implement these so-called quiet zones
with technology but doesn’t recommend it. He suggests instead that
cruise lines implement rules.
“At a practical level it can be done, but signals bounce around and
go through walls,” he said. “We can accomplish that 99%, but not
100%.”
SeaMobile said it can be done and that it has the technology to do
it. According to Nancy
Brumfield, SeaMobile’s chief marketing officer, the company
successfully deployed technology on Silversea’s ships that created
quiet zones.
It is so precise, she said, that if you walk through a door into a
quiet zone while on the
phone, the call drops.
That ability was important to Crystal management when deciding
whether to put cellular service onboard.
“It’s much more difficult to educate guests on the etiquette and
encourage them to follow the rules and speak in a hushed voice than
to turn off the antenna in certain areas,” said Boban Dragojlovic,
Crystal ’s vice president of computer services.
But on Oceania ’s Insignia, which uses SeaMobile's cell service
without quiet zones, passengers do follow the rules.
Spokesman Tim Rubacky said the restaurants and main lounge are
cell-free zones. The onboard daily says: “We kindly request that
guests using cell phones be respectful of their fellow guests.”
Rubacky said there have been no problems.
Some companies, including Cunard Line, Disney Cruise Line and
Seabourn Cruise Line, don’t offer cell phone service and have no
plans to.
Cherie Weinstein, vice president of group sales and administration
for Carnival Cruise Lines, said people expect to be connected today
and it is important that Carnival meets that expectation. However,
she recalls a time when being on a cruise was an excuse not to be in
touch.
“When I was on a cruise I wouldn’t expect to call anybody -- only in
a dire emergency,” she said. “It was nice. It was a true vacation.””

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