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#11
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![]() "Bob Fry" wrote in message ... Not my statement. See http://www.longbets.org/4 What sayeth the group wisdom? I think eventually there will be pilotless aircraft, the question is when. No way. considering the cost of aircraft and the liability of having passengers it will always be cheaper to have someone there to watch over things in the case of error. |
#12
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"Greg Farris" wrote in message
... Technologically, we're just one step away. As soon as clearances are entered directly into the aircraft's navigation computer, via datalink, instezad of having to be punched in by the crew, fully automatic operation will be possible. This will reduce workload for controllers, who will have direct command,and not have to waste time with unpredictable human elements. Why would there be controllers? If the system is more automated, the controllers could be eliminated also. |
#13
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![]() "N93332" wrote in message ... Why would there be controllers? If the system is more automated, the controllers could be eliminated also. By the time we get rid of pilots, the controllers will be long gone. |
#14
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![]() Greg Farris wrote: Technologically, we're just one step away. As soon as clearances are Yeah, like the one step Neil Armstrong made. In reality though, I do not believe the day will ever come when there is not someone physically on board the aircraft capable of flying it and landing it safely. There's just no good reason why we would want to do that. Exactly. Look at the JetBlue incident last week. A relatively simple emergency but a whole chain of decisions needed to be made and executed for the flight to end successfully. Now talk about engine failure, etc. I agree that a computer can do a great job when everything goes more or less according to plan, but what about when it doesn't? Once the airlines get pilots' salaries down to bus driver levels, the I suspect that if you compute pay on a seat basis (i.e. $salary per person carried) that you're already there. -cwk. |
#15
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#16
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![]() "Bob Fry" wrote in message ... Not my statement. See http://www.longbets.org/4 What sayeth the group wisdom? I think eventually there will be pilotless aircraft, the question is when. Not unless we find a way to get rid of pilot unions first. |
#17
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In article mle_e.11361$L15.4226@trndny01,
says... And, of course, it can't handle failure of itself very well. But then, human operators haev that problem too : http://aviation-safety.net/database/...?id=19991011-0 |
#18
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"George Patterson" wrote in message
news:mle_e.11361$L15.4226@trndny01... I agree that a computer can do a great job when everything goes more or less according to plan, but what about when it doesn't? Actually, a computer can do a great job of anything you can think of. It has a problem if something comes up that nobody thought of The real question is whether pilots on average are able to come up with inspired solutions to problems more often than they create problems with perfectly good airplanes. I admit, I don't have the statistics in front of me, but I suspect that human error in the cockpit causes more accidents than human novelty recovers from. This is the same reason that autopilot cars are a good idea, no matter how offensive they may seem to some people. Yes, there will be failures of the equipment. But that will happen MUCH less often than the failures of the humans, and will improve the reliability and efficiency of our transportation infrastructure at the same time. Pete |
#19
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P. Duniho wrote:
This is the same reason that autopilot cars are a good idea, no matter how offensive they may seem to some people. Yes, there will be failures of the equipment. But that will happen MUCH less often than the failures of the humans, and will improve the reliability and efficiency of our transportation infrastructure at the same time. Agreed. But the idea has been around for a long time without much progress being made to implement it. I remember the GM pavilion at the NY World's Fair in '64 where the diaramas showed the cities of the future with computer-controlled cars all running smoothly along the freeways. At that time I would have considered it a virtual certainty that we'd have auto-piloted cars by 2000 if not much sooner. There were demonstration projects in the '60s and there are still such projects and research studies being done today, but I don't see much evidence that they're much closer to reality now than they were back then. So even if all technical hurdles of pilotless airliners can be solved I don't expect to see them in operation by 2030 or for a long time beyond that. |
#20
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"peter" wrote in message
ups.com... Agreed. But the idea has been around for a long time without much progress being made to implement it. I think it's possible it may NEVER happen. Culturally, especially here in the US (but I think this is somewhat of a problem nearly everywhere), I seriously doubt enough people could be convinced to relinquish control of their cars to a computer. For the same reasons that they think that spending hundreds of billions of dollars trying to prevent a handful of deaths from terrorists makes sense, they would rather be in control of their own demise, even if it means that demise is more likely than if they gave up control to a computer. The average person just isn't all that good at evaluating risk and benefit. So even if all technical hurdles of pilotless airliners can be solved I don't expect to see them in operation by 2030 or for a long time beyond that. Pilotless airliners likely will happen before cars, and I agree that "by 2030" is VERY optimistic. ![]() World's Fair, but I fear you may not live long enough to see pilotless cars OR airplanes, even if you live to 100 years. ![]() Pete |
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