I find the emphasis on eye contact weird. First, it looks like you'd still be staring at a seatback. Second, the Brits have been sitting knee-to-knee with complete strangers since at least the invention of the stagecoach, and there hasn't been one recorded case of eye contact. Avoidance comes naturally to us, but Americans can learn it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4jCtGRPNDtM
Hexagonal close packing?
Next:
<img src="http://cdn1.arkive.org/media/63/634D06BB-B64C-4D8D-93DB-8626AD4FED2B/Presentation.Large/Honey-bee-larvae-in-cells.jpg">
I thought they flew _after_ this stage.
Fortune's target audience flies commercial, let alone economy?
Fortune's target audience is like the bulk of the Republican Party's support: not rich, but hoping to be.
Also too: dibs on one of the safer, backwards-facing seats!
RyanAir has a | worse idea|, if such a thing is possible:
<img src="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/_jahCrZfqTxk/TJuTz74BbfI/AAAAAAAAAMw/Zf5kOsfAUdA/s1600/standing-seats2.jpg">
I feel sorry for tall people, especially when they have to fly coach.
Surely, doubling up people who want to join (or re-up) in the mile high club could result in tighter packing?
He he, you said "packing"!
I find the emphasis on eye contact weird. First, it looks like you'd still be staring at a seatback. Second, the Brits have been sitting knee-to-knee with complete strangers since at least the invention of the stagecoach, and there hasn't been one recorded case of eye contact. Avoidance comes naturally to us, but Americans can learn it.