Better WiFi for hundreds of trains under government plans
The UK government plans to upgrade WiFi on over 1,400 main line trains to improve connectivity. The new technology will connect trains to low-earth satellites, aiming to enhance service reliability and speed. While campaign groups support the initiative, they emphasize that issues like travel costs and overcrowding remain top concerns for passengers.
- ▪The upgrade will allow trains to connect to low-earth satellites for better WiFi service.
- ▪Government funding of £57m will support the rollout across nationalised main line services.
- ▪Current WiFi availability is expected to improve from 50-60% to at least 90% with the new technology.
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand
Better WiFi for hundreds of trains under government plans9 minutes agoShareSaveAdd as preferred on GoogleMaia DaviesandKaty Austin,Transport correspondentGetty ImagesThe WiFi on hundreds of Britain's main line trains is set to be upgraded under government plans.New technology will be rolled out on more than 1,400 trains across the UK allowing them to connect to low-earth satellites, which ministers say will provide faster and more reliable service than the mobile networks currently powering on-board WiFi.A government source said the upgrade would "rocket boost connectivity on every main line train in Britain over the next few years, tackling both slow speeds and irritating not-spots".Campaign groups welcomed the move but said passengers' main concerns remained the cost and reliability of…
Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at BBC News — UK.