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New technology speeds up Wi-Fi at Royal Caribbean

ETW StaffMumbai

A major technology investment by Royal Caribbean International gives guests aboard Oasis of the Seas and Allure of the Seas more wireless capacity than ever before. By pairing a new generation of medium-earth-orbit satellites (originally designed to bring the internet to emerging markets like sub Saharan Africa) with sophisticated antenna arrays aboard its newest ships, guests can expect speeds that match, and even surpass, those they get on shore.

Adam Goldstein, president and CEO, Royal Caribbean International, said, “Vacations aren’t just about getting away from it all for modern families anymore. A great vacation today also means keeping friends updated over social media, and enjoying downtime with streaming content played on tablets and phones, not just movies on TV in your stateroom.”

“But matching or exceeding the best on-land service was a tough challenge when the nearest cell tower or cable hook-up was 1,000 miles away. That meant we needed some real breakthroughs, not just incremental increases. And once we cracked the download code, we also got to dream up some pretty interesting new uses for all that connectivity. Our ships go to incredible places – and this makes getting there even more incredible.”

A set of new, custom-built antennae were shipped from Israel to Florida last month, and installed on Oasis of the Seas. Testing confirmed the ships’ ability to match the fastest broadband connections on shore.

Bill Martin, chief information officer, Royal Caribbean Cruises, said, “O3b, our satellite communications partner, calls it ‘fiber speed with satellite reach,’ and this is exactly the result we are seeing in our tests.”

According to Martin, the key to unlocking a land-like experience was reducing satellite latency – the time it takes for something to happen after you hit ‘enter’. This breakthrough technology solves that problem, reducing latency from 750 milliseconds to approximately 140 milliseconds. And with each ship’s overall capacity exceeding 500mbps during system tests, there will be more than enough bandwidth to go around.

Goldstein added, “If you’re a first-time guest on one of these ships, you won’t realise how much work it took to make the wireless so pervasive – or that your cell ‘tower’ is 4,900 miles over your head. If you are a return guest, you’ll be blown away by the improvement. It’s that dramatic.”