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Planes Without Pilots

HughPickens.com writes: John Markoff writes in the NY Times that in the aftermath of the co-pilot crashing a Germanwings plane into a mountain, aviation experts are beginning to wonder if human pilots are really necessary aboard commercial planes. Advances in sensor technology, computing and artificial intelligence are making human pilots less necessary than ever in the cockpit and government agencies are already experimenting with replacing the co-pilot, perhaps even both pilots on cargo planes, with robots or remote operators. NASA is exploring a related possibility: moving the co-pilot out of the cockpit on commercial flights, and instead using a single remote operator to serve as co-pilot for multiple aircraft. In this scenario, a ground controller might operate as a dispatcher, managing a dozen or more flights simultaneously. It would be possible for the ground controller to "beam" into individual planes when needed and to land a plane remotely in the event that the pilot became incapacitated — or worse. "Could we have a single-pilot aircraft with the ability to remotely control the aircraft from the ground that is safer than today's systems?" asks Cummings. "The answer is yes."

Automating that job may save money. But will passengers ever set foot on plane piloted by robots, or humans thousands of miles from the cockpit? In written testimony submitted to the Senate last month, the Air Line Pilots Association warned, "It is vitally important that the pressure to capitalize on the technology not lead to an incomplete safety analysis of the aircraft and operations." The association defended the unique skills of a human pilot: "A pilot on board an aircraft can see, feel, smell or hear many indications of an impending problem (PDF) and begin to formulate a course of action before even sophisticated sensors and indicators provide positive indications of trouble." Not all of the scientists and engineers believe that increasingly sophisticated planes will always be safer planes. "Technology can have costs of its own," says Amy Pritchett. "If you put more technology in the cockpit, you have more technology that can fail.""

329 of 460 comments (clear)

  1. And airplanes without passengers... by sonamchauhan · · Score: 1

    'Nuff said

    1. Re:And airplanes without passengers... by sonamchauhan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Instead of having airlines staff the flight deck back up again to previous levels (i.e. reinstating the flight engineer, or adding a third pilot), cue the snake-oil salesmen with the same pitch - irresistible to airlines - which got us into this mess.

      "Shame about that last crash...
      "You know, you _CAN_ increase safety _AND_ lower costs
      "How? Well, for starters, one less pilot on the flight deck...

    2. Re:And airplanes without passengers... by rhazz · · Score: 1

      Seriously! Why are we talking about automating cars and planes, when we still don't automate trains!

      Green eggs and ham...

    3. Re:And airplanes without passengers... by flatulus · · Score: 1

      I guess you haven't heard of Positive Train Control: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P...

    4. Re:And airplanes without passengers... by GuB-42 · · Score: 1

      Paris metro line 14 is fully automated. There isn't even a driver's cabin.

    5. Re:And airplanes without passengers... by rhazz · · Score: 1

      I have not. Mostly I just hear about the train accidents, most of them being due to human error. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C...

    6. Re:And airplanes without passengers... by KingMotley · · Score: 1

      You mean like the trains at Chicago, Las Vegas, San Francisco, Miami, New York, Tampa, Seattle airports?

    7. Re:And airplanes without passengers... by rhazz · · Score: 1

      Yes, I was referring to less than 100 KM of closed-loop systems.

  2. Sensors wrong by jfdavis668 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Many airline disasters are caused when sensors go wrong or the output is confusing. Air France 447 was one of those incidents. It would be even more confusing to a remote pilot.

    1. Re:Sensors wrong by SargoDarya · · Score: 1

      I think you're right. Taking full control of an airplane with sensors going crazy might be a bad idea but there should be at least a way for some remote operator to take over the plane in case of shady things going on.

    2. Re:Sensors wrong by Rei · · Score: 1, Insightful

      80% of accidents are pilot error. I think the further we move toward automation, the better. Getting the pilot physically out of the plane is a major hurdle that one has to step over in that regard.

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    3. Re:Sensors wrong by Tx · · Score: 1

      It would be even more confusing to a remote pilot.

      What, you mean the remote pilot would have crashed harder?

      --
      Oh no... it's the future.
    4. Re:Sensors wrong by aaaaaaargh! · · Score: 5, Insightful

      To add to this, people seem to forget everything that happened more than a month ago or so. I'd like to see the computer that would have ditched US flight Airways 1549 perfectly into the Hudson River just minutes after the start.

    5. Re:Sensors wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      80% of accidents are pilot error. I think the further we move toward automation, the better. Getting the pilot physically out of the plane is a major hurdle that one has to step over in that regard.

      If you remove the pilot 100% of plane crashes will be from automation error.

    6. Re:Sensors wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The 80% figure is from Boeing not exactly an impartial source.

    7. Re:Sensors wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That figure must probably be read like "80% of accidents could have been prevented if pilots had reacted in exactly the right way when some unforeseen technical failure occurred ..."

    8. Re:Sensors wrong by HangingChad · · Score: 1

      Air France 447 was one of those incidents.

      But who's to say a remote pilot would have done any worse? Everyone died on that flight, so how much worse could the remote pilot have done? Air France 447 isn't the only crash to take place because of clogged pitot tubes. There was also Birgenair 301 and a couple others.

      There seems to be a perception that a remote pilot would somehow do a worse job than someone on the flight deck. Until there's actual experimental data to support that claim it's not a valid argument. Right now you're all going on your perception as someone sitting in the passenger seat. The airline pilot's union is hardly a disinterested third party, it's their jobs on the line.

      And what about accidents cause when the flight crew was distracted or confused? That's a long list there.

      Automation shouldn't need to reach some ridiculous extreme in safety to be considered the superior alternative. It should only have to be +1 better than human pilots. Anything else is irrational.

      --
      That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    9. Re:Sensors wrong by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      But there are standard procedures to follow when the sensors give bad results, which were apparently not followed by the pilots on 447. I disagree that these would be more confusing to the remote pilot. The autopilot was smart enough to recognize a problem and disconnect. If there was nothing but an autopilot, it could be set to a fail safe mode. A typical smartphone is probably better equipped than a human when it comes to flying without visual reference points.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    10. Re:Sensors wrong by TigerPlish · · Score: 4, Insightful

      AF 447 would've had a better chance if the idiotic Airbus un-overridable Flight Envelope Protection had not silenced the stall horn when the aircraft exceeded what the FEP thought was a valid angle of attack.

      The high angle of attack *was* valid, it was reality, it was happening, and whenever the pilots would push the nose down to correct the stall, the stall horn would come on again, so they would pull the nose up again. Which *erroneously* silenced the alarm.

      From the Wikipedia article:

      The stall warnings stopped, as all airspeed indications were now considered invalid by the aircraft's computer due to the high angle of attack.[27] In other words, the aircraft was oriented nose-up but descending steeply. Roughly 20 seconds later, at 02:12 UTC, the pilot decreased the aircraft's pitch slightly, airspeed indications became valid and the stall warning sounded again and sounded intermittently for the remaining duration of the flight, but stopped when the pilot increased the aircraft's nose-up pitch. From there until the end of the flight, the angle of attack never dropped below 35 degrees.

      You see the problem there? The plane thought for the pilot, and it thought wrong.

      FWIW, Boeing's FEP can be completely over-ridden, but not Airbus'. Even with all the benefits of FEP, I think the pilot should always have final say.

      --
      The "Civilized World" jumped the shark ca. 1973.
    11. Re:Sensors wrong by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      To add to this, people seem to forget everything that happened more than a month ago or so. I'd like to see the computer that would have ditched US flight Airways 1549 perfectly into the Hudson River just minutes after the start.

      A point very important you make. Automation is great for instances where sensor data is accurate and a proscribed course of action can be safely followed. More automation can be useful in such cases. However, it's the edge cases where the pilot's judgement is needed to safely operate an aircraft. The USAir 1549 is an excellent example, as is United Flight 232. Could a remote pilot glide a 767 to a safe landing, and avoid cars on the abandoned runway that the copilot happened to know existed, as happened with Gimli Glider? As with many highly complicated devices, automation is a great tool to help the operator in routine, and some casualty, operations; however when things go not as planned and a new twist is added to the scenario you need judgement, not rote rules, and judgement is sorely lacking in automation and difficult to do if you are thousand of miles away and only know what the sensor data feed tells you.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    12. Re:Sensors wrong by MightyYar · · Score: 2

      Is a glide path into a river something beyond the capability of automation? I'm skeptical, but this isn't my field.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    13. Re:Sensors wrong by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >80% of accidents are pilot error

      That doesn't tell the whole story. How many accidents were averted due to human intervention?

    14. Re:Sensors wrong by NotDrWho · · Score: 2

      When humans make mistakes, they are generally far more rational and adaptable than a computer when it comes to recognizing them and making corrections. When a computer fucks up, it will usually chug right along on a clearly irrational path until some human steps in and reboots the fucking thing.

      --
      SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    15. Re:Sensors wrong by SuricouRaven · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's not a technical issue, it's a policy issue: A computer will conclude 'no runways within range, you are all going to die.' A human can conclude 'Screw the procedures, I'm going to try a high-risk controlled crash into a river and hope for the best. No other options.'

    16. Re:Sensors wrong by Richard_at_work · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The decision tree to get to the idea of putting the aircraft down onto anything other than a runway with a CAT I, II or III landing system is beyond automation. Without ILS, the computers on board the aircraft had no idea what the ground infront of them looks like, other than "its there".

    17. Re:Sensors wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Mod parent very negative.

      1) "Pilot error" much of the time means, "A committee of a dozen or more people, spending days to months looking over the evidence, employing a cadre of technical experts and judging with hindsight what should have been done, has concluded that the single person or pair of people should in the few seconds/minutes available have made a different decision which may have led to a better outcome".

      In the absence of pilots, this would just be "programmer error" as software doesn't have the benefit of hindsight either;

      2) It's Boeing selling fly-by-wire.

    18. Re:Sensors wrong by Richard_at_work · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The stall warning was cut off because the readings being fed to it made no sense (they dropped below absolute minimums - the reasoning being that the pilots having sat through 5 minutes of warnings and not changing their approach to flying the aircraft, it won't suddenly fix itself as the horizontal speed drops to zero) - it wasnt cut off because of any automation systems, it was cut off because the readings didnt make any sense.

      But it takes more than an avid Boeing fan to actually read the AF447 report.

    19. Re:Sensors wrong by Rei · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You think he was steering that thing like the Wright Flier? The A320 is a highly automated plane. The decision to land in the Hudson was his, but everything else was fly-by-wire - yes, in glide mode too. You can't overrule it on the A320. Everything involved in keeping the wings level and nose at the gentlest possible angle that wouldn't stall was managed by the flight computer - which is why the plane didn't flip when it hit the water.

      The chief engineer of the A320 project actually referred to the plane as "pilot-proof". If Sully had done absolutely nothing from the time the plane lost power, you know what would have happened? Apart from the plane heading to the Hudson, everything else would have been the same. The plane would have done its best to maintain its original trajectory and kept itself stable as long as it could without losing altitude. Then it would automatically have lost just enough altitude to keep it from stalling, keeping itself flying level for as long as physically possible. If Sully in such a situation had started jerking up on the controls trying to get altitude that the plane wasn't capable of achieving, you know what would have happened? Nothing. The plane would have ignored him.

      The pilot in a modern plane like the A320 doesn't manage, and isn't even allowed to manage, the finer details of flying. The plane does that. The pilot is only there for general overarching strategy. The plane makes it happen.

      Even when crashing.

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    20. Re:Sensors wrong by JeffOwl · · Score: 2

      There are specific procedures the pilots are supposed to follow when sensors give bad data. The case you cite, the pilots were aware that something was wrong and did not follow the correct procedure.

      The problem is that we are living in a sort of no man's land in between manual and automated. Automated enough that the humans don't pay attention, but not automated enough that the systems can handle a multiple fail scenario.

      One of the problems with the current situation is that aircraft require BOTH Humans AND Computers to do their jobs. Neither one by themselves can cover for the other one.

    21. Re:Sensors wrong by trout007 · · Score: 1

      Not sure about that. Edge cases like this a pilot will trust instincts which can include what G forces you are feeling. Unfortunately that leads to error. A remote co-pilot whose life isn't on the line may make a more rational decision based on all data.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    22. Re:Sensors wrong by Tx · · Score: 1

      No, meaning that some of the times that the remote pilot got confusing responses, the remote pilot would crash when the local pilot would not.

      Possibly true, but there have been plenty of crashes where the on-board pilot was confused by his senses, or in the heat of the moment unable to correctly priotiritize conflicting alarms, where a remote pilot might have better perspective, or more opportunity to as for a second opinion, so I think that could work both ways.

      Personally, I would feel safer with a fully automated plane than one that's remotely operated. And that's not even considering the possibility of remotely hijacking the plane or the remote link failing.

      On that, we agree. If not fully automated, then at least implement a "refuse to crash" system that just will not allow the pilot to fly a plane into the ground or whatever.

      --
      Oh no... it's the future.
    23. Re:Sensors wrong by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      crash to take place because of clogged pitot tubes

      I read that as "clogged pilot tubes." Well then yeah, automation would totally solve that problem! One fewer pilot clogging the tubes!

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    24. Re:Sensors wrong by Rei · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No, pilot error means that they didn't do what they were supposed to do in a given predefined situation. And even many of the others were human error, on the ground side. Actual hardware faults as a whole are a very small minority of plane crashes.

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    25. Re:Sensors wrong by MightyYar · · Score: 2

      Wouldn't an automated plane have a different sensor suite? I don't think we are talking about inflating the automatic pilot from Airplane! and calling it a day.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    26. Re:Sensors wrong by MightyYar · · Score: 2

      Why wouldn't it go: "no runways in range, consult chart for alternate landing zones"? I'm thinking that the Hudson (or any other large body of water) would be on the alternates chart.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    27. Re:Sensors wrong by oodaloop · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why can't a computer figure out if there are no runways to fall back on emergency options like roads or rivers? Hard, I'm sure, but far from the hardest part of flying a plane.

      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    28. Re:Sensors wrong by michelcolman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      80% of accidents may be due to pilot error, but probably close to 99% of all would-be crashes due system failures do not turn into an accident because of pilot intervention, and therefore never make it into the accident statistics. Take the pilots out, and you'll see at least an order of magnitude more crashes unless technology improves drastically.

      I'm a pilot, I've never had a crash (like the vast majority of pilots), but I've had several situations where automation failed (either completely shutting off or doing something unexpected and dangerous) and a crash would have resulted if we hadn't taken over.

      In fact, there are lots of crashes that are attributed to pilot error not because the pilots were the only cause for the accident, but because some system failure occurred that should have been handled safely by a well-trained pilot and somehow wasn't. We are expected to handle these problems, so if we don't, it's our fault (and rightly so).

      Take Air France 447 for example, airspeed sensors iced up, autopilot disconnected, other flight crews in the past had had the same problem but handled it well, these pilots got confused and crashed. Probably goes into the statistics as pilot error, but without pilots the plane would have crashed anyway. Every time, including on those flights where the crew did handle the situation correctly (even with inadequate procedures for this particular failure at the time) and landed safely.

      Another example, the Turkish Airlines flight that crashed short of the runway in Amsterdam. The plane was flying on autopilot, yet it's "pilot error" because the pilots should have immediately reacted when the autothrottles pulled the throttles back to idle and the airspeed decayed rapidly. Caused by a malfunctioning radio altimeter which let the automation think the plane was low above the runway and it was therefore safe to pull the throttles back for touchdown. There's a reason why we have an initial training and a yearly recurrent training for automatic landings. Haven't had the training? Manual landings only.

      So no, automation is not safer than human pilots. Not by a long shot, at least not yet. And given the slow pace of technological advancement in aviation, it will be a very long time before it will be.

      Take military drones, for example. Their mission is not exactly complicated: in relatively nice weather, take off, fly a predetermined route, drop some bombs, fly back and land. There aren't nearly as many drones as airliners flying around, yet drones crashes happen all the time, it's not even news.

    29. Re:Sensors wrong by michelcolman · · Score: 1

      Air France 447 was one of those incidents.

      But who's to say a remote pilot would have done any worse? Everyone died on that flight, so how much worse could the remote pilot have done? Air France 447 isn't the only crash to take place because of clogged pitot tubes. There was also Birgenair 301 and a couple others.

      There's also a list of flights where the exact same failure occurred, but the pilots handled the situation correctly and landed safely. I don't know what a remote pilot would have done, but it's certainly easier when you are actually on board so you can look outside or at least just feel the motion of the airplane. And as for automation, well, it would have crashed every time.

    30. Re:Sensors wrong by Rei · · Score: 1

      1. Pilot error is very specifically, the pilot not doing what pilot training says they're supposed to do - and what a computer would have done - in the given, predefined, pre-analyzed situation. Unanticipated situations are not classed as pilot error.

      For example, Lauda Air Flight 004. There was a procedure for recovering in the event of an unanticipated thrust reversal event (which occurred on the flight). The pilot carried it out to the best of their ability but was unable to recover before the plane broke apart. Further analysis showed that the procedure was insufficient to actually recover (it was analyzed for a plane flying lower and slower, but didn't work at high / fast speeds). The crash was not classified as pilot error because they followed the procedure. In a different thrust reverser incident, TAM Flight 3054 had the thrust levers set all wrong. Even though the crew setting it wrong and in violation of the manual was the far likeliest explanation, they still didn't classify pilot error as more than a hypothesis because they couldn't prove that the thrust lever was actually set to a wrong position, rather than a malfunction in the thrust lever itself.

      2. Boeing is behind Airbus when it comes to fly-by-wire.

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    31. Re:Sensors wrong by rioki · · Score: 1

      But that is exactly the issue at hand. Sure we can automate the plane, but it still needs to interface with air traffic control. The next thing you know a air traffic controller crashes a plane into a mountain for some psychotic reason.

    32. Re:Sensors wrong by TigerPlish · · Score: 1, Informative

      Did you read the article I quoted? They flew the airplane all the way to the floor in a stall. Every time they pushed the nose down the stall horn started. Every time they (erroneously) pulled *UP*, it silenced. Absent any visual cues and without cross-referencing instruments, they thought they were making things better by maintaining that attitude.

      The point I was trying to make is, if the FEP would've allowed the stall horn to sound when at that high alpha, MAYBE they would've kept pushing the nose down, horn be damned, and fly the plane out of the stall. The FEP, to me, was not the cause but definitely a huge contributor.

      How about this one? I jokingly call this one the Paris Lawnmower. Airbus A320, during a demo at the Paris Airshow. You know, home court. FEP again got in the way, the pilot asked for more power and up elevator, the computer told him to get bent.

      The crew applied full power and the pilot attempted to climb. However, the elevators did not respond to the pilot's commands, because the A320 computer system engaged its 'alpha protection' mode (meant to prevent the aircraft entering a stall.) Less than five seconds later, the turbines began ingesting leaves and branches as the aircraft skimmed the tops of the trees. The combustion chambers clogged up and the engines failed. The aircraft fell to the ground.[2]

      There was a theory floated by some that Airbus messed with the FDR data and threw the pilot under the bus. Airbus denies this. We'll never truly know.

      And I should know better than to take your flamebait, but here you go: I'm not just a fan of Boeing, I'm a fan of most airplanes out there, old and new, little and big, from many eras, from many makers. Aviation is one of humanity's most useful, influential and coolest achivements. The DC-3 transformed America, The Jet Age (on the wings of the 707 and DC-8) truly transformed the world.

      Wanting to have a pilot have the ultimate say is why I'm not too keen on pilotless aircraft under the current state of the art.

      --
      The "Civilized World" jumped the shark ca. 1973.
    33. Re:Sensors wrong by Richard_at_work · · Score: 3, Interesting

      What sensor suite would that be? Even military systems find it inordinately difficult to discriminate between ground targets amongst ground clutter, and thats with human guidance.

      Currently an aircraft cannot find and airport and land without external input, be it GPS, ILS or other such systems - and thats to a well defined landing point. A computer would have to identify a safe location to ditch, make decisions based on available data and extrapolated data, and then actually perform the ditching.

      Another point to make about the Hudson ditching was that it was only successful because the pilot specifically skipped a load of stuff in the checklist and told the co-pilot to fire up the APU, because he knew there wasn't going to be enough electrical power from the engines and RAT to give him full command authority - he would lose things like flaps and spoilers, meaning his options would be much more limited. If he hadn't done that, chances are he wouldn't have made it even to the Hudson.

    34. Re:Sensors wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Because if you're going to put in a contingency plan for every single conceivable problem into your program, you're going to get on hell of a big and unreliable program with heaps and heaps of corner cases with radically different desirable outcomes, which is kind of a bad in this case. And then you still haven't dealt with the cases you weren't imaginative enough to consider possible, like getting five rather than four water tight compartments flooded in your "unsinkable" ship.

    35. Re:Sensors wrong by Rei · · Score: 2

      The simple facts are, accident rates on planes have gone way down as the amount of automation has gone way up. Computers are simply more reliable than pilots. The fact that most crashes come down to pilot error is a big problem, despite how you present it (ground error being probably the next most common). A computer will always follow the checklist for the right response to a given problem ("some system failure occurred that should have been handled safely by a well-trained pilot and somehow wasn't."). Pilots screw up.

      As for military drones, please, they're not at all comparable to commercial aircraft. Most don't even have a flight radar or anti-collision systems. They were designed to be gotten out to the battlefield as soon as possible, in as little development time and unit cost as possible - and they're not exactly flying a regular London to NYC route either.

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    36. Re:Sensors wrong by Ksevio · · Score: 1

      But as pilots, their instinct when they hear a stall warning shouldn't have been "pull up"

    37. Re:Sensors wrong by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 2

      Theoretically, it can do that. Practically, somebody has to figure out all the possible emergency options ahead of time, along with how to rank them by desirability, for the computer to choose one. An experienced pilot can reason through his options based on his experience and knowledge of the actual situation facing him. A computer has to be preprogrammed with all possible options and how to rank them by someone who has to imagine all the possible situations before they happen.

    38. Re:Sensors wrong by TigerPlish · · Score: 1

      That's why I said and highlighted "erroneous" in my second post.

      From the first scraps of info that I heard on this flight when it happened, my first thought, and that of an aviation geek friend, was "Don't they teach basic stall recovery? Don't they teach cross-referencing airspeed vs. altitude?"

      --
      The "Civilized World" jumped the shark ca. 1973.
    39. Re:Sensors wrong by AC-x · · Score: 1

      In the Air France 447 it was the (junior) co-pilots who became confused though, not the flight computer. In a more automated plane the autopilot would, in the same situation, have put the plane into a safe pitch attitude and thrust setting (the correct procedure for loss of airspeed indication) and called for the senior pilot/operator to fix the issue.

    40. Re:Sensors wrong by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Again, not my field so I'm coming at this very naively.

      Wouldn't an automated system have "ditch" sites programmed in? It wouldn't need to be smart enough to identify a river - just know that the river is there.

      And while I must confess to not knowing what is on the checklist, couldn't the computer run through it in a few seconds? Or more probably, run things in parallel that a human can only do in serial? Is there something about the situation that would have prevented the computer from firing up the APU?

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    41. Re:Sensors wrong by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Presumably - without pilots - this would have to change for even routine runway operations.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    42. Re:Sensors wrong by RavenLrD20k · · Score: 1

      Imagine if the "refuse to crash" system engaged just before runway touchdown.

    43. Re:Sensors wrong by jfdavis668 · · Score: 1

      No, the first thing that happened was the flight computer got confused by differing readings from the speed sensors. It returned the controls to manual and placed the system in alternate law. Then the co-pilots screwed up. The co-pilots not working together to solve the problem caused the crash. Having one of them remote wouldn't have helped the situation.

    44. Re:Sensors wrong by Rei · · Score: 1
      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    45. Re:Sensors wrong by OldManAtTheKeyboard · · Score: 1

      Fly-by-wire does not mean what you think it means here. Fly-by-wire means that the control surfaces are not connected directly with cables. It does not have anything to do with automated control such as a flight computer. To be able to ditch in the Hudson the flight computer was not being used.

    46. Re:Sensors wrong by budgenator · · Score: 1

      You would think that sensor failure (especially an iced pitot tube) would be such a common training scenario, that an Airline Pilot would be able to react properly by reflex. An Airbus should have GPS, inertial and radar altimeter, that would be more that enough redundancy to fly without pitot tubes.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    47. Re:Sensors wrong by rot26 · · Score: 1

      "Yes" to all your questions, because computers are MAGIC, omnipotent, and have the contents of all of the text messages you sent to your drug dealer.

      --



      To ensure perfect aim, shoot first and call whatever you hit the target
    48. Re:Sensors wrong by Will.Woodhull · · Score: 1

      There have also been those incidents where pilot and copilot were incapacitated, and ground controllers had to watch helplessly while the plane kept flying on autopilot until it ran out of fuel and crashed.

      Now that newer airliners are basically fly-by-wire designs, the only thing standing in the way of a remote operator safety system is cost. This is now a cost in dollars versus cost in lives problem. The questions should be not whether to do it, but how to do it most effectively and efficiently.

      --
      Will
    49. Re:Sensors wrong by swillden · · Score: 1

      proscribed

      FYI, you mean "prescribed". Proscribed is pretty much the exact opposite.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    50. Re:Sensors wrong by dunkelfalke · · Score: 4, Interesting

      But it was. It kept the plane stable within the flight envelope so it wouldn't stall at low speed it flew, limiting the angle of attack to a safe one even when the pilot used his side stick for maximum nose pitch up. It helped to lessen the pilot's workload during the landing.

      You can read it all up in the NTSB report of the accident:
      http://www.ntsb.gov/investigat...

      For example this:

      The Airbus simulation indicated that the airplane performed as designed and was in the alpha-protection mode from 150 feet to touchdown. As discussed previously, the captain's attention was narrowed, which would have made it difficult for him to maintain awareness of the airplane's low-speed condition during the descent.

      or this:

      Despite being unable to complete the Engine Dual Failure checklist, the captain started the auxiliary power unit, which improved the outcome of the ditching by ensuring that a primary source of electrical power was available to the airplane and that the airplane remained in normal law and maintained the flight envelope protections, one of which protects against a stall.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    51. Re:Sensors wrong by jfdavis668 · · Score: 1

      GPS tells you ground speed, not air speed. Knowing air speed is critical to flying. You can fly 100 mph into a 100 mph headwind, and have 0 ground speed. Going 100mph ground speed with a 100 mph tail wind means you go crashing into the ground.

    52. Re:Sensors wrong by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      proscribed

      FYI, you mean "prescribed". Proscribed is pretty much the exact opposite.

      Yes Speel Cheekers are not always my friend. Thanks for the correction.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    53. Re:Sensors wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Sadly, this isn't true. If everything's working OK, sure, an Airbus won't let you do anything too stupid. But when both engines have failed?

      Firstly, as the engines spin down, all electrical power is lost. After a few seconds, the RAT extends, and the aircraft goes to Emergency Electrical Configuration. For a few seconds the pilots have only extremely basic controls - rudder, pitch trim and engine thrust. Since there's no power, none of the fly by wire works at all, let alone working well enough to protect the flight envelope.

      Once the RAT deploys, only the Captain has control, since only his instruments are powered. At this point, my copy of the Airbus QRH tells me that there is no stablizer control (although the elevator still works), but more significantly it says the phrase: "ALTN LAW: PROT LOST" - meaning that the aeroplane flies like it should (load factor command in pitch, roll rate command for roll, etc.) but that it will make no attempt to protect the flight envelope. So, Capt. Sullenberger could quite happily have stalled, spun, entered a barrel roll or anything else.

      Once the APU starts (which takes about a minute after being commanded) then, provided the Yellow electrical hydraulic pump is working the aircraft should go back to "normal law". I've seen a demonstration (in the simulator) of an engines-out autoland in this case. This is quite far down the normal checklist, and is after the "dive to reach optimum engine restart speed" lines, so doing it out of sequence relies on good airmanship.

      But even once it has started and everything is sorted, to say "Then it would automatically have lost just enough altitude to keep it from stalling" isn't true. The aircraft would settle at V(alpha prot) - which is well below its optimum range glide speed, so actually it'd start to sink really quite quickly.

      And you really think that the A320 yaw damper is strong enough to stop the aircraft flipping when it reaches the water? It doesn't react quickly enough to overcome gusts of wind, and there's a LOT less force behind those! Bear in mind it takes a second or so for the rudder to travel to its limits from the centre position, even at full speed.

      I'm an A320 pilot, and I've produced most of this from memory, so it might be slightly off, but the broad strokes are there. I feel that modern aeroplanes are perhaps more complicated than you think.

    54. Re:Sensors wrong by Kjella · · Score: 1

      I guess you want to read it your way, what I read is that without the initial unrelated sensor glitch - which had corrected itself by then - the flight computer would have said "We're stalling and you want to pull up? I'm sorry Dave, but I can't let you do that." But because the computer diagnosed itself as possibly going nuts and handed over control to these highly trained pilots who should know what to do, those morons acted like one of Pavlov's dogs at the sound of the stall warning. I'm sorry that the flight computer couldn't make a trained monkey land the plane, maybe next time try without the monkey?

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    55. Re:Sensors wrong by Richard_at_work · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You are talking about billions of sites across the globe - and sites would be dependent on weather, local conditions, change of use etc etc etc. What if on that fateful day, one of the Hudson's ferries happening to be in the way but there wasn't enough power available to allow the use of the forward radar? What if the field pre-chosen had suddenly turned into a camp site? Or had a combine harvester and a fuel bowser parked in the middle of it. What if the Hudson was iced over?

      As for the APU, the issue is that it simply was way down on the checklist - and a lot of things on that checklist can't be done in parallel etc Just because a computer has a speed advantage, doesn't mean it can use it. It was a concious decision from the PIC to fire up the APU out of checklist order. You don't find concious decisions coming from computers.

    56. Re:Sensors wrong by brambus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is such an ignorant post I can't believe it. It appears you've never actually had an airplane's controls in your hands.
      1) Fly-by-wire isn't what you think it is. It simply means there are no mechanical linkages.
      2) Airbus' computer-over-human approach is no panacea and it has resulted in numerous near-disasters, one of the most recent ones.
      3) Even Airbus isn't religious about this approach. Read up on Alternate Law and Direct Law.
      4) Had Sully not maneuvered USAirways 1549, it'd have landed in the middle of housing.
      5) Water landings require you to do a flare & float to stall just feet above the water level to minimize airspeed. If he had not done this, the airplane could have easily smashed itself apart, since an A320 power-off glide rate of descent is around 1500 fpm. Water isn't soft at these kinds of speeds you know.

    57. Re:Sensors wrong by budgenator · · Score: 1

      But it takes more than an avid Boeing fan to actually read the AF447 report.

      It more a matter of the differences between the American and the European psyche, Americans are much more individualistic and more likely to demand to be the masters of their own fate; they poorly tolerate machines that don't follow commands.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    58. Re:Sensors wrong by wired_parrot · · Score: 1

      To add to this, people seem to forget everything that happened more than a month ago or so. I'd like to see the computer that would have ditched US flight Airways 1549 perfectly into the Hudson River just minutes after the start.

      And the main reason flight 1549 landed perfectly in the Hudson river was due to the A320's fly-by-wire system, which allowed the pilot to maintain aircraft nose up and as low a speed as possible for landing without stalling. He had to maintain a fine line between gliding in slow enough to avoid injuries and not stalling, and without the onboard computer this would have been a difficult maneuver for a human pilot to accomplish with his workload.

    59. Re:Sensors wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yes, it's all automation and nothing but automation. Improved radar allowing the plane to avoid turbulent situations, better manufacturing techniques, etc, etc, etc had nothing to do with it.

      I get this feeling you don't actually know how computers work. Let me explain something to you. Computers can't tell if they're doing something correctly, or incorrectly. They have to be told. All they can do is run a program. It is actually considered an impossible problem to have a computer evaluate correctness of a solution without human input.

    60. Re:Sensors wrong by conoviator · · Score: 1

      You are right. William Langewiesche expanded on this in his excellent 'Fly By Wire: The Geese, the Glide, the Miracle on the Hudson'. Airbus engineers should receive a lot of credit for the outcome. But, of course, the pilot executed the turn to the Hudson quickly and managed the crisis very well.

    61. Re:Sensors wrong by Richard_at_work · · Score: 2

      Ahh, Wikipedia articles. One minor step up from UTTER AND COMPLETE BULLSHIT.

      Try reading the accident reports on both of your chosen examples - they differ wildly from the Wikipedia articles conclusions.

      In the case of AF296, the aircraft performed exactly as it should have - if the aircraft had allowed the commanded elevator action, the aircraft would have stalled and come down before the tree line. The issue with AF296 is that the pilot was being a fucking twat, had descended to below the height of local obstacles, and dropped the engines back to idle - the engines responded to the commanded thrust increase within the engine manufacturers specs, which is to say that it takes several seconds to spool up from idle to the setting the pilot input. By which time the aircraft was in the trees.

      The pilot should not have been flying at that altitude with the engines at idle, they should have been at a high thrust level and he should have been controlling his speed using spoilers, flaps and other aerodynamic devices - if he had done that, he would have had instant power available when he needed it. The bloke was a twat.

      If the same manoeuvre had been attempted in a Boeing 737, with the same vectors and the same thrust inputs, the aircraft would still be in the trees.

      The theory that Airbus messed with the FDR and CVR is also rubbish, and has been proven in the past to be rubbish - there was a period of "missing data", but that was caused by the tape being folded over, and when folded back again to how it was the data all matches up. A lot of the rumours about data tampering came about from a grainy photo taken of the crash scene, which showed the FDR with a completely different stripe on it than there was in the official photo of the recovered FDR - hence it not being the same FDR. But the original negatives of this photo have never been released for confirmation, and other photos of the same scene show the correct stripe on the FDR.

      Remember that the pilot involved in AF296 spent time in prison and has lost every court case he brought against Air France, Airbus, the French aviation regulatory body and everyone else - he is also the main proponent of tampering theories etc by Airbus.

      Take it from me - don't assume that Wikipedia articles are unbiased and fair. If you follow the aviation articles long enough, you see some very "interesting" edits and roll backs going on - entire sections backed up by aviation regulatory board citations go "missing", and negative hearsay gets put in its place. These edits only really seem to affect the Airbus pages...

    62. Re:Sensors wrong by Bongo · · Score: 1

      Don't you mean "crashes a dozen planes" ?

    63. Re:Sensors wrong by Bongo · · Score: 1

      The simple facts are, accident rates on planes have gone way down as the amount of automation has gone way up.

      But would the rates have gone down without pilots there at all?

      It may be just a case of the pilots having more time to sit and watch what's going on.

      Isn't there a philosophical difference on whether the machine should watch the pilot (and override the pilot if the machine thinks the pilot is making a mistake) and the pilot watching the machine (and overriding the machine when the pilot thinks the machine is making a mistake) ?

    64. Re:Sensors wrong by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      The problem is that the aircraft is unlikely to be capable of evaluating the safety of those alternate landing zones. It couldn't coordinate with authorities on the ground easily to clear a road, for example, and rivers often have boats on them. It might be possible but it would be pretty hard to program an autopilot to land anywhere other than a runway, which has ILS and other landing aids, in a manner that doesn't sent it crashing into buildings or otherwise just cause a bigger disaster.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    65. Re:Sensors wrong by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      What sensor suite would that be? Even military systems find it inordinately difficult to discriminate between ground targets amongst ground clutter, and thats with human guidance.

      What do you mean, "ground clutter"? A runway is by definition a long, straight(ish) strip without clutter. "All" (heh heh) the plane is going to need is a RADAR/LIDAR (combined, I imagine) sufficient to scan a strip of potential runway and characterize the density of any obstacles so that it can differentiate between a bush or a fluttering plastic bag and a volkswagen or a big rock. Okay, you can't buy that from the electronics section at Wal-Mart, but it's not like it's not a solved problem. That's a fairly limited-scope application. Then you give the plane a map, slap it on the ass, and wish it the best. If it detects that it's going to come down someplace suboptimal (can't make an actual airfield) then it starts ratcheting its way down the list while simultaneously crying for help. If a remote human operator is available and has time to make a brilliant decision, they can instruct the plane as to what they think it should do. Otherwise, it checks its map. Highway? Nope, it's daytime, never going to be clear. Let's look at waterways, there's one that is wide enough to take a stab at, and within range. Heat up the sensor suite, let's take a look...

      It seems like a relatively small and unsophisticated sensor package would be capable of doing this job. And you're actually going to want this hardware anyway. Trusting the base station is daft, you need to be able to verify that the runway is clear for yourself before landing. So why should this sound farfetched? The plane will need to have this hardware onboard to begin with. Dual-purposing it to handle crash landings seems obvious.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    66. Re:Sensors wrong by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It was a concious decision from the PIC to fire up the APU out of checklist order. You don't find concious decisions coming from computers.

      Not true consciousness, no. But the computer can "know" that it has a power budget, know that the engines are in trouble and may stop delivering their share, and know that if its power supply is threatened that it should activate the APU to ensure that it continues. In practice, you would special-case it, and there would be a long list of conditions any of which would serve as a flag to activate the APU.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    67. Re:Sensors wrong by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Actually, what I would have thought was that by now, we would have solved the problem of pitot tube icing. I get that it's a complex problem, heating the tube will affect readings, but this should still seriously be a solved problem by now.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    68. Re:Sensors wrong by AC-x · · Score: 1

      The flight computer wasn't confused, it correctly detected an error in the speed readings and then, as designed, returned control to the human pilots. It could just have well put the plane into the correct pitch/throttle settings itself, but it wasn't designed to.

      Also a senior pilot in a non-chaotic situation (for example at a remote control station) would have had a much better chance of maintaining situational awareness over what was going on and so better spot mistakes like pitching up too far.

    69. Re:Sensors wrong by jfdavis668 · · Score: 1

      Air France was replacing the pitot tubes. It just hadn't got to the plane involved yet.

    70. Re:Sensors wrong by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      The problem is, having the APU further down the list is done for a reason, and Sullenberger essentially rolled the dice by doing what he did.

      Plus starting the APU can take a considerable drain on the existing power budget, which can cause knock on effects. Again, its another one of those decisions to be weighed up at the time.

    71. Re: Sensors wrong by Rei · · Score: 1

      Propulsion-only automated flight control systems have already been demonstrated and are expected to be integrated into next-generation commercial aircraft.

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    72. Re:Sensors wrong by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      Theoretically, it can be small and unsophisticated.

      Realistically, it will be triple redundant and expensive. Just like everything else on an airplane is, with good reason.

    73. Re:Sensors wrong by Rei · · Score: 2

      Air France Flight 296 was crew error. And the body count was "3". The only thing the fly-by-wire system did was prevent their attempt to pull up before they had the speed to actually pull up; the plane was already doomed because they were too close to the trees before they realized their mistake.

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    74. Re:Sensors wrong by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Plus starting the APU can take a considerable drain on the existing power budget, which can cause knock on effects.

      Then that's a shit design.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    75. Re:Sensors wrong by Rei · · Score: 1

      Facts are, UAVs are not commercial airplanes, and are not designed to have the safety features of commercial airplanes. Just ignoring that most of the accidents were early on when they were rushed to the battlefield, you're comparing apples to oranges. You might as well argue that helicopters are deathtraps because kids flying RC toy helicopters crash them a lot.

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    76. Re:Sensors wrong by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

      The history of air travel disasters is full of pilots who steadily held course until they crashed into the ground, or pulled the plane into a stall over and over again despite the autopilot repeatedly trying to take over and prevent a fatal situation.

    77. Re:Sensors wrong by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 2

      The plane would calmly throttle up and abort landing, the same way pilots would be trained to do? What do you even think you're saying here?

    78. Re:Sensors wrong by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I understand it would be a hard problem - otherwise we'd all be automated already. It just seems possible to me. I mean, we're talking about a "when all else fails" scenario. You certainly aren't going to program it to maintain current course - you are going to want to crash the plane away from inhabited areas if possible. Better to risk a collision with a ship than to plow into the most densely populated part of the US.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    79. Re:Sensors wrong by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

      The entire thing described here is an automation system with ground controllers. The plane would flag a bunch of alarms on the ground and operators would evaluate how to deal with it.

    80. Re:Sensors wrong by gander666 · · Score: 1

      Damn, I wish I had mod points to mod you up

      --
      Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress ... but I repeat myself. - Mark T
    81. Re:Sensors wrong by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Still, I'd rather have those decisions carefully weighted ahead of time by people who understand the system inside and out rather than depending on a single human being to "roll the dice". Even if Sullenberger was right in all of his decisions (and who could argue with him?), not every pilot is going to be capable of such rational thought under duress. Every computer is going to do exactly the same thing.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    82. Re:Sensors wrong by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

      It's worth noting that the automation in modern fight aircraft is also absolutely vital - modern fighter jets are incapable of stable flight, and only fly because automation dynamically adjusts control services to correct for the chaotic irregularities of unstable flight.

    83. Re:Sensors wrong by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Heh, I appreciate the snark, but I really do think they would have to program ditch sites along the route. At the very least, the plane needs to crash into places that will cause the fewest ground fatalities. It's not like this data is hard to gather compared to the task of building an automatic airplane.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    84. Re:Sensors wrong by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

      This is an important point: flying is so far outside watching for lions on the African planes that almost everything your instincts tell you to do is wrong. It's why pilots have checklists to start with - because in pretty much every situation that arises, the absolute worst thing you can do is start going with "what it feels like".

    85. Re:Sensors wrong by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

      A pilot has no way to know wind speed from being in the plane you realize. An autopilot would be able to infer it from GPS data alone since an apparent 0 ground-speed would not be showing loss of altitude or command-authority over the control surfaces. In practice a plane would be able to use dopper-radar to get a read on wind-speeds as well, and also sample the directions to infer the situation.

      A pilot in a plane with 0 visibility (likely, if you had a complex situation arising) is more blind then a computer.

    86. Re:Sensors wrong by mjwalshe · · Score: 1

      Well if you could persuade that Nice Mr Finch from POI to release his AI source code - it would work just fine

    87. Re:Sensors wrong by TemporalBeing · · Score: 1

      Isn't there a philosophical difference on whether the machine should watch the pilot (and override the pilot if the machine thinks the pilot is making a mistake) and the pilot watching the machine (and overriding the machine when the pilot thinks the machine is making a mistake) ?

      Yes:

      Boeing vs Airbus

      US (individual) vs Europe (collective)

      --
      Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
    88. Re:Sensors wrong by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "80% of accidents are pilot error."

      Yes. Now, what of that percentage do you think is due to unproper instruments' ergonomy? And then, why do you think automation to substitute the pilot handling, or better yet, the programer doing it whose life is not at stake, will do any better?

    89. Re: Sensors wrong by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      You don't fly by the seat of your pants in IFR. Doing that inevitably leads to spatial disorientation and then you fall out of the sky.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    90. Re:Sensors wrong by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "80% figure above, that means 20% of accidents are still due to weather, equipment failure, etc. Those same conditions exist even if pilots are no longer flying."

      Humm, no. At the very least, taking out the pilot from the cockpit means more equipment so, at current equipment failure rates, will mean more accidents due to that reason. And this at current failure rates. One can guess that as of currently, the things the pilot is still doing are the ones that are difficult to take out of her and thus, more prone to higher failure rates -and once you start thinking on the economic incentive to outsource those most dificult parts to cheap third world companies the 80% figure above starts looking too much an apples to oranges comparation case.

    91. Re:Sensors wrong by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      No, system designers are not complete morons.

      Or are they?

    92. Re:Sensors wrong by sjames · · Score: 2

      Which translates to "The pilot didn't do what they were supposed to do in the predefined situation that took us a month to determine was the case".

      In other words, first you have to determine what the situation is, and that's not always trivial, even in retrospect.

    93. Re:Sensors wrong by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "The simple facts are, accident rates on planes have gone way down as the amount of automation has gone way up"

      Correction: accident rates of planes have gone way down as the amount of *pilot-supporting* automation and instrumentation has gone way up.

      "A computer will always follow the checklist for the right response to a given problem"

      Yes, of course, because the last, say, 40 years have teach us that software is always bug-free and that blind confidence on instrumentation about flight status hasn't ever lead to bad assessment which, in turn, would lead to the wrong checklist to be followed.

    94. Re: Sensors wrong by danhuby · · Score: 1

      How can you be so sure? This scenario could have been coded for. Software could have handled it better.

      In this TED talk it's demonstrated how the software controlling a quadcopters could figure out an innovative new way to fly even with two of its propellers removed.

      http://www.ted.com/talks/raffa...

      I'm not sure a human operator could have done that.

    95. Re:Sensors wrong by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      How many accidents were averted due to human intervention?

      This is actually interesting.

      When things get tough, you want a human being with experience. The problem is, as the computers take over, having a person in the cockpit doesn't really mean anything. Sure, I can fly an airplane. But you wouldn't want me behind the stick if we're dodging thunderstorms. You'd want someone with experience flying in that area in those conditions.

      That's the interesting angle. Which would you rather have on the stick? A computer or an inexperienced human?

    96. Re:Sensors wrong by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "Why can't a computer figure out if there are no runways to fall back on emergency options like roads or rivers?"

      It can, of course. But then, you need real time awareness of *all* your environment, not only the track you are expected to follow, and the ability to discern which paths are unavoidingly unpracticable and those where an emergency call can clear the path, and 100% perfect instrumentation so the system doesn't take a frozen pitot tube for a stalled plane.

      And a programing team with enough experience to know in advance about all the weird things that can happen during a flight... in a time were there's no access to experienced pilots because you retired all them long ago (you don't think you'll make the new system 100% fool proof overnight, do you?).

      And all that just to cope with a single non-standard situation, now you still to develop the system to cope with the other hundreds ones.

      "Hard, I'm sure, but far from the hardest part of flying a plane."

      Are you sure? What you are really asking for is for the planes to achieve orders of magnitude higher level of environment awareness coupled to orders of magnitud harder artificial intelligence.

      It doesn't look like peanuts to me.

    97. Re: Sensors wrong by TigerPlish · · Score: 1

      You don't fly by the seat of your pants in IFR.

      100% correct. So you believe your primary instruments: your artificial horizon, your altimeter, variometer, airspeed. You also must use your VOR, DME, ILS, ADF or whatever nav you're using.

      So why did AF 447 not do any of that? It's obvious they could not / did not correctly interpret what their panel surely must've shown: Zero airspeed (false), unwinding altimeter (true), high sink rate (true), artificial horizon mostly blue (True)

      Why was that?

      --
      The "Civilized World" jumped the shark ca. 1973.
    98. Re:Sensors wrong by turbidostato · · Score: 2

      "Wouldn't an automated system have "ditch" sites programmed in?"

      Yes, if it's programmed to do so.

      "It wouldn't need to be smart enough to identify a river - just know that the river is there."

      No, the one that needed to be smart enough is the programer, and if the programer is that smart he'd immediately ditch it as an option since he wouldn't now in advance if the river is frozen, deep enough, sustained traffic at the moment of the accident, etc.

      The fact is that the automated system would need to be as fast as the human to evaluate the situation (very easy), had the ability to process as much environmental information as the human to input the evaluation process (very hard) and as clever as the human to think out of the box (impossible in the next few decades).

      No. Taking off the pilot from the cockpit is as of now not in the slightest about increasing security but about how higher a dead toll looks acceptable for better financial results.

    99. Re:Sensors wrong by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "The pilot in a modern plane like the A320 doesn't manage, and isn't even allowed to manage, the finer details of flying. The plane does that. The pilot is only there for general overarching strategy. The plane makes it happen."

      These all mean that in this case the system (composed both of the machine and the pilot) worked exactly and beatifully as designed, with the plane flying and the pilot thinking for the best result. Now, if you take away the pilot, who's going to do the thinking?

    100. Re:Sensors wrong by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      I did read other sources. I talk to people who read other sources. Enough to know Airbus hides info from pilots -- critical info such as pitch trim, throttles that don't move as autothrottle adjusts power, and provides no tactile feedback to the stick

      So you just admitted that you don't know anything - Boeing aircraft "hide" just as much information, throttles move as a single entity and yet are controlled through auto-throttle as independent entities (this has been linked as a contributory factor in more than one air crash - see the Kegworth air crash report), tactile feedback is a computer amalgamation rather than actuality etc etc.

      Airbus isn't a seat-of-the-pants airplane, you almost have to think like a passenger, not a pilot.

      Ouch, so you definitely don't know anything about Airbus aircraft then.

      Oh well -- that's the conclusion I reached over the years of this accident being known, as well as other Airbus incidents involving their computers.

      And all that does is make you come across as another anti-Airbus critic rather than someone actually informed of the topic at hand.

      On AF 447 BEA blamed training, cockpit ergonomics and incorrect procedure. They didn't even mention the role FEP had. It seems the French authorities like to shield Airbus from responsibility and scrutiny.

      See, anti-Airbus bullshit. The FEP had no role in the situation, the crew should have recovered from the stall without issue. Infact, they should never have got into the stall in the first place, they should have enacted stall avoidance procedures as soon as the autopilot disconnected. But they didn't, their training completely broke down and the entire situation went to pot.

      The Airbus flight controls don't' talk to each other. The left seater can't tell what the right seater was doing. One of them pulled the stick back all the way and kept it there. I read somewhere, forgot where, that the other pilot did the opposite at the same time. Sorry, no citation for that one. Go look for it yourself.

      Don't need to look, I've seen that crap spouted elsewhere. Have you *ever* sat in an Airbus cockpit? If not, then its easy to just accept the bullshit that neither pilot knows what the other is doing - with both pilots sat in their seat, its trivial to glance at the others side stick and see what position its in. Nothing is blocking it.

      Oh, and if one pilot is doing one thing and the other pilot is doing something else, thats a complete breakdown of CRM in the cockpit - the pilot flying has command authority, the other pilot should not be touching the stick. And in any case, the sticks have priority buttons which require pressing before the stick does anything - so its impossible for both sticks to be engaged at the same time, both pilots can be dancing the macaraina on their own stick and it wouldn't matter, only the one with command priority would have any effect.

      The crew was confused and even panicked for many minutes. They were passengers in an airplane that was perhaps too smart for it's own good.

      And they shouldn't have been - you know how long the actual airspeed mismatch situation occured for during the entire final phase of AF447s flight? The airspeed mismatch which was caused by the iced up pitot tube, and caused the autopilot to disconnect? Less than 3% of the total event time. The rest of it was the crew panicking and not carrying out their basic stall avoidance protection. Immediately when they received the airspeed mismatch warning, they should have angled the nose up slightly and applied a set amount of throttle. They did neither. And that is what killed them, not the aircraft.

      1. Did they not see the altimeter unwinding?

      They did. They ignored it.

      2. Did they not see the artificial horizon showing more blue

    101. Re:Sensors wrong by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      No, the one that needed to be smart enough is the programer,

      I'm not THAT smart, but even I know that the auto-flown plane would need to be programmed to ditch into the least populated areas possible. It's one thing to kill everyone on the plane, quite another to fly into a populated area.

      Taking off the pilot from the cockpit is as of now not in the slightest about increasing security but about how higher a dead toll looks acceptable for better financial results.

      Without some data to consider, it could very well be both. If the 80% pilot error can be brought down to a 70% automation error, that's still a safety improvement. It does not need to be perfect - just better than humans. If it also lets you save half a million in salaries and use more of the plane for paying passengers, then yay.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    102. Re:Sensors wrong by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      And liability.

      Attempt landing on a river? If it works, your pilot is a hero. If it doesn't, and he crashes into the adjacent school? Well, he was just trying a desperate attempt to save lives that went tragically wrong. If the decision to consider rivers as emergency landing sites is made in advance, could the airline be held liable for an extra deaths that result from the risky landing?

    103. Re:Sensors wrong by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "the readings didnt make any sense."

      Wrong, wrong, utterly wrong.

      Readings don't make sense only when they come from defective equipment. These readings made perfect sense since they were demonstrated to be correct: they were faithfully transmiting what was really happening.

      They were only percieved as nonsensical by the guy that, thousands of miles away, wasn't able to think on that specific scenario where they made perfect sense coupled with a cabin crew that was trained to be overly confident on the ability of that distant guy to properly assess real time flight environment.

    104. Re:Sensors wrong by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "I can't even imagine how it must feel (not feel?) to hand-fly something as fast and heavy as an airliner *with no stick feedback!*"

      No, you can't. You visually fly a Cessna.

    105. Re:Sensors wrong by Fire_Wraith · · Score: 1

      Yes - it really comes down to how thorough the programming is, and how much imagination and foresight the programming team has. To really do it right, you would need to bring in lots of subject matter experts (i.e. veteran pilots), and exhaustively cover every situation that's happened in history, as well as anything they can think of that might go wrong. You'd also then need to rigorously subject it to a Q&A process to make sure the program is handling all of those cases correctly. Even then that might not be enough, but that would be the right way to do it.

      Now, how expensive do you think all of that is, and how confident are you that a given software company will get it right, without bugs - because in this case a "crash" is going to become a rather deadly double entendre. At most it would have to be given serious oversight by the FAA before it was cleared to operate.

      Finally... do you really think passengers are going to want to fly on one, even then?

      On the other hand, cargo flights are a prime candidate for "drone-ification" like this, and I won't be surprised at all when that happens. I just think too many people are too afraid (and probably with good reason) to fly on a pilotless passenger aircraft.

    106. Re:Sensors wrong by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "That's the interesting angle. Which would you rather have on the stick? A computer or an inexperienced human?"

      A very interesting one, in fact, because as you automate more and more and the pilot is seen less and less the mighty hero he used to be (along with the pay range he used to have), the less experienced humans you'll have on the stick so you are risking reaching full automation in a self-fulfilling prophecy kind of way.

      In the end, you'll have accidents due to automation as you have accidents by human error. The (difficult) point is to set which of both scenarios render a better overall outcome.

    107. Re:Sensors wrong by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "I'm not THAT smart, but even I know that the auto-flown plane would need to be programmed to ditch into the least populated areas possible."

      No, certainly you are not THAT smart if you think that this is the only needed input and that you can set its value well in advance.

      "Without some data to consider, it could very well be both. If the 80% pilot error can be brought down to a 70% automation error"

      That's right. But if you don't consider the data it might be very well that a party will push you to a no-return path for their own profit. What if the promised 70% automation error ends up being 85% (oh, who could have expected that!) but the companies still save the half a million in salaries and the extra cargo space?

    108. Re:Sensors wrong by Agent0013 · · Score: 1

      Oh, the fools! If only they'd built it with 6,001 hulls! When will they learn?

      --

      -- ssoorrrryy,, dduupplleexx sswwiittcchh oonn.. -Quote found on actual fortune cookie.
    109. Re:Sensors wrong by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      No, certainly you are not THAT smart if you think that this is the only needed input and that you can set its value well in advance.

      Apparently I'm in good company. I never said it would be the only input, only that it is a necessary one.

      What if the promised 70% automation error ends up being 85% (oh, who could have expected that!) but the companies still save the half a million in salaries and the extra cargo space?

      Are you asking for my opinion? I'd force them to be as safe as prior to the change. Obviously safety is a relative measure. We already make compromises for the sake of costs, so I don't really see this as a new issue.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    110. Re:Sensors wrong by Tom · · Score: 1

      Because an experienced human pilot can take two looks at a highway and see if it's possible to land there. He understands one hundred details in two seconds because the human brain is, despite all its failings and shortcomings, and incredible pattern-matching engine and really, really good at finding the important details in noisy input. We're still trying to make computers as good as the worst humans when it comes to things like vision and shape recognition.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    111. Re:Sensors wrong by KingMotley · · Score: 1

      Well a pilot gets better with experience, but a computer has the experience and knows how to correct every error ever previously encountered.

    112. Re: Sensors wrong by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      Poor training, I guess. It would not be the first time pilots interpret an upcoming stall as something else. For example, a Tu-154 (and this is not a very smart airplane - there is some automation, but it is pretty unsophisticated) crashed in 1985 because the crew mistook the airplane vibrating due to almost stalling to being engine surges and reduced the power. I think that was the deadliest Tu-154 crash ever.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    113. Re:Sensors wrong by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      You misunderstand the discussion - its not about identifying runways, its identifying alternatives to runways in emergency situations. You know, amongst all the clutter that you dont want to hit.

    114. Re:Sensors wrong by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I will clarify - the readings didn't make any sense when combined with the stall warning parameters, as the airspeed was below the minimum bound.

    115. Re:Sensors wrong by TigerPlish · · Score: 1

      Well then, I respect your credentials, but will still say that I'd like the pilot to have final say.

      I"m still WTF on AF 442. Bewildered, if you will. I can't wrap my brain around the fact that entire aircrew disregarded all their other instruments. I expect that out of a rookie like me, perhaps, if I got caught IFR while not being trained for it, but.. eh, I'll just stop right here. It happened, even if I can't comprehend how.

      --
      The "Civilized World" jumped the shark ca. 1973.
    116. Re:Sensors wrong by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Why wouldn't it go: "no runways in range, consult chart for alternate landing zones"? I'm thinking that the Hudson (or any other large body of water) would be on the alternates chart.

      The best GPS on the market cant even figure out the best way around traffic conditions when given a link to my cities live traffic monitoring system.

      Further more, do you know how much work would go into developing a map that would have potential alternate landing zones... Because we dont have a way to automatically determine them, it will need a massive amount of human intervention to create (and a GIS analyst is more expensive than a pilot). By the time you've finished making one for the UK or Germany alone, it would be horribly out of date. Imagine a nation the size of the United states with all of it's flight paths.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    117. Re:Sensors wrong by mjwx · · Score: 1

      What sensor suite would that be? Even military systems find it inordinately difficult to discriminate between ground targets amongst ground clutter, and thats with human guidance.

      This. The systems I've seen have a DEM of the terrain it's flying over and uses that against altitude and positioning sensors... You have to pray that its reading the right altitude or the ground might be 20 feet above/below where the drone thinks it is.

      Even LIDAR isn't that good at detecting where solid ground is, especially if there's foliage or a body of water (not sure how well they deal with snow and ice, we dont have much of that in Oz but I cant imagine it would help).

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    118. Re:Sensors wrong by mjwx · · Score: 2

      You think he was steering that thing like the Wright Flier? The A320 is a highly automated plane. The decision to land in the Hudson was his, but everything else was fly-by-wire - yes, in glide mode too.

      Sigh,

      It looks like you dont know what "fly by wire" is. Fly by wire is simply replacing mechanical controls (as in pneumatics, cables, pulleys and so forth) with electronic ones (as in sensors and solenoids). Modern cars are the same with "drive by wire". It simply means your go pedal isn't attached to the throttle body by a cable like it is in my old Nissan.

      If Sully had done absolutely nothing from the time the plane lost power, you know what would have happened?

      We'd be calling it a tragedy instead of a miracle because the plane would have landed in the middle of a bunch of houses... and by landed we mean crashed in a spectacular fireball.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    119. Re:Sensors wrong by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      Look at self driving cars. Currently most cars have nothing in them that can detect an obstruction in front of them. That's cause they're not set up to autodrive, just like airplanes aren't set up to autofly*.

      * I'm discounting Autopilot as that's like cruise control. Primitive automation under the supervision of a human.

    120. Re:Sensors wrong by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      It sounds like you have issue with the Stall horn mechanism, not the actual FEP.

      In the initial incident, the plane disconnected Auto pilot, auto thrust, and went from Normal law to Alternate law. So the plane actually disabled some of the "nanny un-overridable" systems. Stall protection was disabled, so the plane let them stall it, because they were commanding it to stall.

      When the stall warning sounded, what did they do? Haul back on the stick, the exact opposite of what they should do.

      Even with a broken air speed indicator, they should say "Gee, we have a nose high attitude, 100% throttle, a whining stall horn, and the clock is counting down from 38,000 ft, maybe we should stop hauling back on the stick and push it forward like we're supposed to"

    121. Re:Sensors wrong by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I don't think anyone is suggesting that you could just stick a computer in an existing A320 and fly it as-is. There would quite obviously need to be more sensory equipment.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    122. Re:Sensors wrong by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      The best GPS on the market cant even figure out the best way around traffic conditions when given a link to my cities live traffic monitoring system.

      Try Waze.

      Further more, do you know how much work would go into developing a map that would have potential alternate landing zones

      I'm not seeing that as anywhere near the level of effort it would take to make the plane fly itself. Basically have a bunch of people looking at pictures classifying things as farmland, rivers, etc. Census maps with population densities, existing road maps, etc. Not cheap, but probably a lot cheaper than paying 2 highly-skilled guys to sit in a cockpit.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    123. Re:Sensors wrong by rioki · · Score: 1

      Like in that German Wings flight?

    124. Re:Sensors wrong by dave420 · · Score: 1

      You really should read some of the more recent research in the field, as clearly you are a decade or so out of touch.

    125. Re:Sensors wrong by Tran · · Score: 1

      Only if someone does the updates...

    126. Re:Sensors wrong by Triklyn · · Score: 1

      ... aren't you arguing that automation is the source of the decrease in aviation accidents... not the fact that we have those accidents, and 150 dead people is a hell of an incentive to try to train your pilots to prevent something similar?

      i'd say drones are meant to be re-used... aren't they a couple million each? kinda cheap but not exactly disposable. you know what they call a disposable uav? a missile, we've got those.

    127. Re:Sensors wrong by Triklyn · · Score: 1

      :) don't know about you, but i'd rather my pilot have some skin in the game... if you know what i'm sayin.

    128. Re:Sensors wrong by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      You misunderstand the discussion - its not about identifying runways, its identifying alternatives to runways in emergency situations. You know, amongst all the clutter that you dont want to hit.

      You misunderstand reality. The alternative to a runway looks just like a runway on the runway-detecting sensor package.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    129. Re:Sensors wrong by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      No, it really does not - are you a pilot at all? Because it doesn't sound like one.

      Runways for large civil aircraft are 3000+ meters of reasonably flat concrete or tarmac without any obstructions. The only place you may find something like that is in a flat desert, a long river or the sea, because everywhere else either isn't 3000+ meters of flat whatever, or it has obstacles. And its rare that you have a handy flat desert around when you need one.

      With a river you still have to watch out for obstacles such as other river users, and you have absolutely no idea what lurks just under the surface - just because it looks flat on the surface doesnt mean theres a huge rock just under the surface which will rip the belly out of your aircraft the moment you touch down. What about that lightweight river boat that the radar is proving difficult to make out against the scatter off the water?

    130. Re:Sensors wrong by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      No, it really does not - are you a pilot at all? Because it doesn't sound like one.

      Irrelevant. But nice logical fallacy of appeal to authority. If you had a valid argument, you'd make it.

      Runways for large civil aircraft are 3000+ meters of reasonably flat concrete or tarmac without any obstructions. The only place you may find something like that is in a flat desert, a long river or the sea,

      or a highway, or many boulevards, or a river (which is what we're talking about) or the sea or a salt pan or a beach. Your failure is one of imagination.

      also, the runway does not need to be perfectly flat.

      And its rare that you have a handy flat desert around when you need one.

      It's getting less rare all the time.

      What about that lightweight river boat that the radar is proving difficult to make out against the scatter off the water?

      He'd better get the fuck out of the way before he gets sucked into an engine.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    131. Re:Sensors wrong by Tom · · Score: 1

      On the contrary, I'm working with OpenCV right now in a project, I've read up on a couple very recent papers regarding foreground/background segmentation, and the results are quite astonishing if you compare them to a decade ago. And in some edge cases (especially low visibility, low contrast, slow movement), the computer can beat the human eye.

      But in the vast majority of cases, especially when the machine was not prepared for this precise task, there's still way too much crazy shit happening to entrust human lives to it, and machines still make many mistakes that humans look at for a split second and say wtf?

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  3. When can we automate society? by 50000BTU_barbecue · · Score: 1

    And get rid of the large amount of useless bureaucratic sludge slowing everything down? Oh no, automation is only good when *you* lose your job and *they* save money.

    --
    Mostly random stuff.
    1. Re:When can we automate society? by alex67500 · · Score: 1

      Define *they*

    2. Re:When can we automate society? by 50000BTU_barbecue · · Score: 1

      Rent seekers.

      --
      Mostly random stuff.
  4. Why not both? by js3 · · Score: 2

    I'm still blown away that there is no active ground monitoring of all flight wherever they may be in 2015. We still have planes "disappearing" because nobody knows where they are once they leave the ground.

    So instead of having two pilots, why not have a computer monitoring system that actively monitors airplanes with only 1 pilot in it. Any weird actions by the pilot would trigger a warning allowing ground operators to override it. Boom, no more missing planes, or suicidal pilots.

    --
    did you forget to take your meds?
    1. Re:Why not both? by Tx · · Score: 1

      I kind of agree on the monitoring, but then again it is actually exceedingly rare that planes "disappear", and even in those exceedingly rare cases, monitoring alone wouldn't have changed the fate of the flights in question, so there is bound to be some question about the cost/benefit of such a system.

      As to your proposed solution, there are obviously a lot of factors to be weighed up. Personally I'd tend to feel that the whole remote-piloting thing might introduce as many problems as it solves; not only do you need to worry about your pilot's ability to control the plane, now you have to worry about whoever has access to the remote piloting facilities. And you have to make whatever communications gear is required on the plane to enable that 100% tamper proof, otherwise you just made it easier for that one pilot (or a hijacker) to take over. Anything is possible, but it's certainly not clear that any given solution is a magic bullet.

      --
      Oh no... it's the future.
    2. Re:Why not both? by geekmux · · Score: 1

      I kind of agree on the monitoring, but then again it is actually exceedingly rare that planes "disappear", and even in those exceedingly rare cases, monitoring alone wouldn't have changed the fate of the flights in question, so there is bound to be some question about the cost/benefit of such a system.

      You're right. It may not change the outcome or prevent an accident, but determining exactly where an accident occurred helps immensely when trying to unearth other clues provided by black boxes and other relevant hardware. We certainly struggled with that last year, but with the appropriate technology planes would not stay missing.

    3. Re:Why not both? by wiredog · · Score: 1

      And then the one pilot pulls the breaker on the monitoring/remote control system. So the breakers are made non-pullable. And then, oops, an electrical short brings down the aircraft, because the pilot couldn't pull the breaker...

    4. Re:Why not both? by budgenator · · Score: 1

      Well one thing about a remote piloting facility would be there would be more opportunity for direct supervision of the Pilots unlike pilots aboard the aircraft. The Aircraft would have to have a continuous satellite connection for the remote facility so any signal coming from below the horizon would be invisible so something like what the military uses to pilot drone or perhaps a VPN over the planes internet connection would work well enough. Any hijackers would have to hack into the system at the uplink side of the satellite connection which is physically challenging and break the encryption of the satellite link and the encryption of the aircraft connection inside the satellite link, I'd see that as a very difficult series of challenges for the terrorists.
      Perhaps a better method would be to have video cameras on the flight deck, outside the flight deck door and a way for the ground to absolutely over-ride the door lock. Seems that it's much more difficult to crash a plane when there is two pilots at the controls.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    5. Re:Why not both? by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

      Yes if there's one obvious solution it's allowing a bunch of random people to make decisions about how to fly a plane. Populism is the true test of operating complex machinery!

    6. Re:Why not both? by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Its's not a breaker then.

      Note that NASA has figured out most of these scenarios and while there are no guarantees you can work around quite a number of technical hurdles.

      The problem *is* the humans. Humans program (via sw and hw) the automated system, but if they miss something then the flight fails without human intervention. OTOH, if you let a human touch anything during a flight there is a finite chance that that human will become compromised in some way. So to combat that, we put in two humans, wagering that the chance of both being compromised is exceptionally low.

      The point is that as long as humans are in control or involved things can - and will - go wrong. But humans are dumb panicky animals, so we keep going around in circles like this to pretend we're doing something to make it better.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  5. They can be effective by MagickalMyst · · Score: 1

    Sadly, planes without real pilots worked well on 9/11.

    --
    Political correctness is really just herd psychology pushed by insecure people who desperately seek social conformity.
    1. Re:They can be effective by jfdavis668 · · Score: 1

      I don't think they landed very well at all.

    2. Re:They can be effective by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      I don't think they landed very well at all.

      Some of them didn't bother to learn how.

      A month later, they (Atta and Al-Shehhi) spent another $1,500 for three hours of flight simulator training at the SimCenter, near Miami. An instructor said they concentrated on turning aircraft, rather than practising the more difficult manoeuvres of take-off and landing, which he thought was unusual.

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
  6. and we will need basic income to cover the people by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    and we will need basic income to cover the people automated out of a job or we can kind get the same thing with people who will get locked up just for room / board / doctors at a much higher cost.

  7. Technology can indeed fail by Rei · · Score: 2

    Such as the pilot's control hardware, indicators, windscreens, oxygen supply....

    And I know some people will just go, "Well, what if the pilot or copilot on the ground goes rogue and takes over?" The obvious response is that they'd be operating in a secure facility with dozens of other people and extensive supervision; nobody is ever going to just let any random person secretly take over a plane without anyone else knowing. And no, ATC systems are not net connected. I work in an ATC center, when I need to look something up online while trying to debug a problem I have to use my cell phone or go back to my office.

    Probably the simplest solution to all of this would just be an additional entry to the CPDLC standard, and the hardware changes necessary to support it: one that locks out the pilot from all control and switches the autopilot on, set to the last flight plan agreed to by both ground and the pilot. One would of course have to make sure that there's no way for the pilot, while he's still in control, to sneakily break the datalink communication stream fast enough that ground wouldn't have time from the onset of suspicious activity to send the command.

    Having highly reliable communications would be critical for any pilot-override or remote piloting system. In each case, any cutoff in communications should force on the autopilot as per above until communications could be reestablished.

    --
    Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    1. Re:Technology can indeed fail by JeffOwl · · Score: 1

      And no, ATC systems are not net connected.

      And neither were the centrifuges in Iran

    2. Re:Technology can indeed fail by BostonPilot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As a pilot, I would never fly an aircraft which has a remote capability to take control away from me. As a passenger, I would never fly in an aircraft in which remote control could be taken away from the crew. I don't even think the "remote copilot" is a good idea. There are a lot of good reasons to fly with a crew of 2... it's not just workload and risk of incapacitation. When things get weird, it's good to have another person to bounce ideas off of. United Airlines Flight 232 is a great example of that, and there are plenty more.

      This isn't the first time we've seen suicide by the crew, but it's extremely rare (I can think of maybe 5-6 in 40 years). It sucks to be the people in the back when that happens, but it also sucks when an airplane drops on your house and kills you and your family. I'm as worried about one than the other which is: not very. We can improve the situation some: better screening of crew, USA style "always two people in the cockpit" rules... To suddenly decide that we can't trust the crew despite the fantastic safety record aviation has is just ludicrous.

       

    3. Re:Technology can indeed fail by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      You're on a tech site... which means a good percentage of the folks here would agree that the damn airplane should be smart enough not to crash---even if the pilot directs it right at the mountain---the damn airplane should just refuse to destroy itself (yes, there's that remote possibility of sensor malfunction where the pilot "knows better"... well... those don't malfunction as often as humans, and also, we can build better and more sensors... we can't build better humans).

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    4. Re:Technology can indeed fail by Rei · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that the NSA is going to start taking down planes?

      Um, if the US government wants to take down planes, they have whole branches of the government specifically dedicated to that sort of stuff.

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    5. Re:Technology can indeed fail by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

      Your Murphy sig conflicts with your statement.

    6. Re:Technology can indeed fail by JeffOwl · · Score: 1

      You are saying that nobody but the NSA is capable of exploiting human weakness to breach air gapped systems. Really?

    7. Re:Technology can indeed fail by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Modern flight control computers are pretty sophisticated but epistemology is just not one of those things typically programmed in. You can't make an aircraft that 'will refuse to destroy itself' - other than have it refuse to start up in the first place. Physics dictates that there are situations where the plane goes from flyable to unflyable rather quickly (cf, Air France 447) - the 'computer' was trying really hard not to crash, just didn't work out that way. The current Airbus system has been criticized for it's propensity for the plane to override the pilots - it obviously works the vast majority of times, but we've seen several instances where the automation systems created more problems than they solved.

      Computers are not, and will not be that 'smart' for quite some time.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    8. Re:Technology can indeed fail by Rei · · Score: 1

      Your analogy was to a ridiculously complex multi-year incredibly expensive infiltration operation by the NSA. Don't blame me if your analogy was ridiculous. If you want a different analogy, go ahead and choose one.

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    9. Re:Technology can indeed fail by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

      Centrifuges are still different systems to aircraft. Aircraft don't run Windows either.

    10. Re:Technology can indeed fail by budgenator · · Score: 1

      It really shouldn't have been a surprise either, events like this tend to cluster. Not only does an event like MH370 trigger others like Germanwings 9525, but a lot of other suicides and even apparent accidents go up.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    11. Re:Technology can indeed fail by Tom · · Score: 1

      USA style "always two people in the cockpit" rules..

      That, actually, is a totally stupid crazy rule. You're basically telling your pilots that no matter how often they prove themselves to be innocent, you constantly suspect them of being potential terrorists / suicidal mass-murderers.

      Better do away with that stupid reinforced door and lock. It was added to solve one problem, yes, but as we've seen it creates other problems that you then need more band-aids for to solve, which will create yet other problems...

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    12. Re:Technology can indeed fail by JeffOwl · · Score: 1

      If you can't make the mental leap from that analogy, then I'm not sure a different one would help unless it was specific to ATC. It doesn't take the NSA to pay off a janitor to plug a thumb drive into a PC. And yes, I know the target systems aren't Windows, but Linux isn't invulnerable either. This doesn't even have to be at an FAA location. This could be at Raytheon or Lockheed Martin, or whoever is responsible for development of that particular system.

      I'm trying to figure out if you are thinking of the potential attackers as a bunch of goat herders sitting in mud huts

    13. Re:Technology can indeed fail by JeffOwl · · Score: 1

      Not sure where you are going with this. The reference was to Air Traffic Control (ATC) systems, not aircraft. The centrifuges don't run Windows, Windows was just a vector in the attack. ATC systems are not typically running Windows either; modern systems are running on Java and Linux, which are also vulnerable.

    14. Re:Technology can indeed fail by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      Modern flight control computers are pretty sophisticated but epistemology is just not one of those things typically programmed in. You can't make an aircraft that 'will refuse to destroy itself' - other than have it refuse to start up in the first place. Physics dictates that there are situations where the plane goes from flyable to unflyable rather quickly (cf, Air France 447) - the 'computer' was trying really hard not to crash, just didn't work out that way. The current Airbus system has been criticized for it's propensity for the plane to override the pilots - it obviously works the vast majority of times, but we've seen several instances where the automation systems created more problems than they solved.

      Computers are not, and will not be that 'smart' for quite some time.

      On Air France 447 the computer detected anomalies in the instruments, disabled Auto pilot, moved from more restrictive normal law to less restrictive alternate law, and got out of the way.

      The guys in the seats, not the plane, started hauling back on the stick, approaching, then entering a stall. If the plane were in Normal law it would have prevented them from entering a stall. Instead the plane stood out of the way, warned them (by means of a stall horn) that the plane was going to stall, then allowed them to continue to increase their angle of attack beyond that of a stall.

      For several minutes the plane stood out of the way as they descended 38,000 ft, hauling back on the the stick, in a stall. If the pilots pushed the stick forward the angle of attack would have decreased, and the plane would have exited the stall.

    15. Re:Technology can indeed fail by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      USA style "always two people in the cockpit" rules..

      That, actually, is a totally stupid crazy rule. You're basically telling your pilots that no matter how often they prove themselves to be innocent, you constantly suspect them of being potential terrorists / suicidal mass-murderers.

      Better do away with that stupid reinforced door and lock. It was added to solve one problem, yes, but as we've seen it creates other problems that you then need more band-aids for to solve, which will create yet other problems...

      I always thought it made sense from the perspective of "What if the one pilot in the cockpit suddenly keels over", or if there's some type of emergency, even a flight attendant in one of the seats can help manage the workload until the other pilot can return.

    16. Re:Technology can indeed fail by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

      Two places: people's lives aren't in danger with centrifuges. Them breaking is the same as any other mechanical stoppage of a plant. The choice of operating system, as a result, for the types of PLC controllers which are used, is quite different and subject to different selection requirements then an aircraft's flight systems.

    17. Re:Technology can indeed fail by Tom · · Score: 1

      I always thought it made sense from the perspective of "What if the one pilot in the cockpit suddenly keels over"

      Yes, but not having the door locked makes even more sense form that perspective. Plus there's been at least one case (that I know of) where a passenger (who was also a commercial pilot) landed a plane after something happened to the pilot/s.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  8. Shortsighted linke always by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A pilot saves all passengers by emergeny landing in the Hudson river, and everybody prÃzises the virtues of human pilots. A pilot Mills himself and 149 passengers and crew, and promptly we should geht rid of human pilots.

  9. Drone Airline? by lionchild · · Score: 1

    Let me get this straight...the thought is to propose a drone-based airline? While it may be mostly auto-pilot, there's a human remote co-pilot to watch over things, just in case. So, how many planes does this one co-pilot watch? What's the lag time between aircraft and their remote-cockpit? How fast do the backup remote-comm systems kick in when the primary is getting wonky? And what keeps the remote co-pilot session from being hacked/co-opted and then turned into a remote drone-weapon?

    I ..just don't think it'll happen in my lifetime. I could be wrong, but ..I'm not putting any money in that stock today.

    --
    Awk! Pieces of eight. Pieces of eight. Pieces of seven... ERROR: General Protection Fault. [Paroty Error.]
    1. Re:Drone Airline? by captainpanic · · Score: 1

      It takes to start a discussion about drone airlines is one suicidal pilot who deliberately flies into a mountain.
      All it will take to end the discussion on drone airlines is one hacker / angry operator who makes the plane fly into a mountain.

    2. Re:Drone Airline? by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Or the one angry operator in charge of 8 planes at once, who makes 8 planes fly into the ground.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
  10. Skin in the game by Headw1nd · · Score: 1

    I think one important part of the trust we have in pilot is that they get to die with the rest of us if something goes wrong. Where it is obviously not a foolproof system, it is much more inherently trustworthy than a remote pilot. Also what happens when two autopilots have concurrent problems and they have the same remote co-pilot?

    1. Re:Skin in the game by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Simple, just have a sergeant-at-arms in the control room whose responsibility is to shoot the operator if the plane he's remotely controlling crashes.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    2. Re:Skin in the game by werepants · · Score: 1

      Posting to undo an accidental downmod. Funny comment.

    3. Re:Skin in the game by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      l2sarcasm.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
  11. no by jdawgnoonan · · Score: 1

    I have no desire to fly on one of these. I believe that human confidence in technology is a little too exuberant. I assure you that government and business will only take this risk with people who are expendable, meaning you will not see Air Force One with one or no pilot anytime soon.

  12. Baby steps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    We don't even have automated trains and they run on freaking tracks, honestly it's not a huge technical issue to get rid of the pilot, it's way more of a policy and social problem - at any moment there are many UAVs flying around autonomously

    1. Re:Baby steps by Moof123 · · Score: 1

      Yes, we have numeruous examples of light rail trains that have been very safely operating for decades.

  13. cause of intent by geekymachoman · · Score: 1

    Whatever people invent some other people are gonna try to exploit it, and in some cases they will succeed.
    To successfully prevent people murdering other people you need to treat the cause of that intent. Or at least start thinking about it instead of just forcing another dumb law or trying to put a camera in the cockpit, remote control .. whatever.

    In 20 years there will be so many laws and regulations it will be impossible to live.

    1. Re:cause of intent by Moof123 · · Score: 1

      People have been warning about the ever increasing number of laws for decades, and yes we long ago passed the threshold you fear. We simply live with more laws than we can comprehend, and many are paid no heed. Sadly though we are all likely guilty of multiple offenses on a daily basis, so be careful what you say or the system might decide it is worth the bother to look a few up and prosecute you.

  14. Re:Shifting the risk by jdawgnoonan · · Score: 1

    Yeah, and what happens when they lose connectivity to a plane?

  15. We'll never learn by Aethedor · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And when the first plane crashes due to a bug in the pilot software, we all start wondering again if removing the pilot was a wise decision.

    This whole Germanwings plane crash shows, again, one important thing: people suck at dealing with risks. Several hundred thousands of flights went well. The last incident with a pilot causing a plane to crash was back in 1995. The Germanwings plane crash was an incident. We must learn to treat it that way, as an incident. No reason to panic and start changing policies, rules and procedures. With every change, new risks and new ways of things to go wrong will be introduced. When that happens and you again make changes, you end up in a loop of changing things. The result: the changes will cost a lot of time, energy and money while the risks are not reduced.

    We need to start accepting that risks are part of our life. Unacceptable risks need to be dealt with, but more important: acceptable risks should be accepted, even when they occur!!!!

    --
    It doesn't have to be like this. All we need to do is make sure we keep talking.
    1. Re:We'll never learn by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Statistically, this is a complete non-risk. Investing anything into preventing a repeat is making things less safe, as the money is not spent to increase security elsewhere. And then there are unintended consequences, like the "secure" cabin door.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    2. Re:We'll never learn by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      The last incident with a pilot causing a plane to crash was back in 1995

      ORLY? More like 2013.
      And yes, most aviation incidents cause changes in policies, rules and procedures, which is a good thing. If it doesn't happen, it just causes more crashes, like USAir Flight 405.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
  16. Re:and we will need basic income to cover the peop by JeffOwl · · Score: 1

    and we will need basic income to cover the people automated out of a job

    Airlines are already complaining about a shortage of pilots today. This will take years and people growing up will have the opportunity to pursue something else, like, I don't know, the technology for automating aircraft. And those military drone pilots will have an almost direct path into civilian employment, assuming that they can get over Macho Grande.

  17. Race to the bottom much? by johnnys · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just put two reasonably competent people in the cockpit at all times and stop trying to f**k an extra penny out of every dime, you cheap chiselling b*st*rds.

    Right now many feeder airlines are barely paying a living wage for their junior cockpit staff, so stop pretending that the personnel costs are going to put you out of business. You're certainly not passing along the recent fuel cost savings to us sardines.

    (I haven't had my coffee yet, so that's my excuse for the "negative tone" in this post.)

    --
    Sometimes the "writing on the wall" is blood spatter...
    1. Re:Race to the bottom much? by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Does not work for this (but there is no real risk here anyways): Pilot 1 clonks Pilot 2 over the head to much the same effect.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    2. Re:Race to the bottom much? by geekmux · · Score: 1

      Just put two reasonably competent people in the cockpit at all times and stop trying to f**k an extra penny out of every dime, you cheap chiselling b*st*rds.

      I'm curious which budget do you accuse them of being "cheap" with in this instance...

      ...the salary budget to pay for reasonably competent pilots, or the medical/psych budget to screen reasonably competent pilots at regular intervals?

      It would have perhaps helped if they did not completely ignore the warning signs of depression with this particular pilot. Yet again, likely budget constraints, but perhaps not the ones most obvious.

    3. Re:Race to the bottom much? by Sir_Eptishous · · Score: 1

      Yep, to me this is a really important point.

      Being a pilot has traditionally been seen as a white collar job with decent pay and benefits. However, as is usual since the "WallStreet-ization" of the American economy, where short term gains for the share holders override anything else, pilots have changed to an almost sweat shop type of a job(Feeder Airlines especially). Yes of course we can thank all the union busting that has taken place in the last 40 years or so for some of this also.

      Now there are more ways to remove people from a career.
      Yea, "lets get one guy in a trailer somewhere to co-pilot a hundred flights at once! Think of the money we'll save!"

      Where is the end game in all this? Who will support a consumer based economy when no one is working?

      --
      We play the game with the bravery of being out of range
    4. Re:Race to the bottom much? by swb · · Score: 1

      Right now? That's been going on for decades. I dated a woman briefly who was trying to get a commercial pilot license and her boyfriend (it was a complicated relationship...) was a pilot for a regional feeder airline and he was making less than I was as a low-level civil servant at the University. And this was circa 1991.

      His hours were crazy, too, the kinds of work patterns you'd swear wouldn't be allowed if you asked the random person on the street if pilots should work those kinds of shifts.

      The airlines were able to get away with it because they held out the golden carrot of a pilot job on the big planes.

      I'm sure this automation idea is being floated by airlines because they want to cut costs. I can't help but believe they see the writing on the wall when oil prices surge again and air travel at the scale we have it now simply becomes economically impractical for the bulk of passengers.

    5. Re:Race to the bottom much? by jader3rd · · Score: 1

      Just put two reasonably competent people in the cockpit

      That's the real trick, ain't it. You can't guarantee that statement.

    6. Re:Race to the bottom much? by Nidi62 · · Score: 2

      Just put two reasonably competent people in the cockpit at all times and stop trying to f**k an extra penny out of every dime, you cheap chiselling b*st*rds.

      Right now many feeder airlines are barely paying a living wage for their junior cockpit staff, so stop pretending that the personnel costs are going to put you out of business. You're certainly not passing along the recent fuel cost savings to us sardines.

      Pretty much any pilot working for a regional airline is a brand new pilot fresh out of flight school. That's with essentially no experience, just their ratings. A little Googling shows that after their first year, an FO at expressjet makes over 30k a year at almost $35 an hour at a 75 hour per month guarantee. To put that in perspective, the ground crew at my airline have to work for 4.5 years before they make that much. Many pilots live in crash pads that cost them $200-400 a month, utilities included. assuming they are a decent pilot, within 10 years they generally have enough hours and experience to apply for a major airline. Any pilot who come through the military has a pretty good shot at going straight to a major or cargo airline as opposed to a regional one. At the major airline I work for, currently the most junior FO on the lowest seniority A/C type makes $133 per hour, and are guaranteed at least 65 hours of pay per month. That is over $8600 a month. There are plenty of jobs that pay a lot less than what a brand new, zero experience pilot makes. Worst case, if they take 10 years to get to a major airline they are making over $60k at the regional then over $100k at the major. Until then, low-mid 30s and up (for only 2-3 years experience) is not exactly what many people would call a "barely living wage"(I was able to do just fine with much less than that), and it's certainly still better than the wage most of the people loading the planes, or even working security for the planes, are making.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    7. Re:Race to the bottom much? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      It wasn't depression per se. It was his personality profile. This might have been seen ahead of time - the Internet Echo Chamber is full of mental health professionals who are convinced that screening tests would have picked this guy out before he went postal, but I have my doubts. Psychological screening tests are interesting and at times useful but they have crap for track records in terms of specificity and sensitivity. They are also very intrusive, annoying and hard to interpret, administer and follow.

      No system will ever be perfect and you can never cover ever edge case. If the cockpit doors had not been hardened, the pilot (and rest of the cabin) could have broken in and prevented the crash. Then the next 911-style terrorist could have plowed another plane into the ground. Although I agree that current wages, job security and benefits for commuter pilots is pretty marginal, it isn't at all clear that this played into his decision. After all, he was German - a country with a well developed social benefit system. If he could not fly, then (I'm presuming) he would have been eligible for medical and / or retraining benefits. It's not like he would have become homeless. So other things were working in his psyche.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    8. Re:Race to the bottom much? by tlhIngan · · Score: 2

      I'm curious which budget do you accuse them of being "cheap" with in this instance... ...the salary budget to pay for reasonably competent pilots, or the medical/psych budget to screen reasonably competent pilots at regular intervals?

      It would have perhaps helped if they did not completely ignore the warning signs of depression with this particular pilot. Yet again, likely budget constraints, but perhaps not the ones most obvious.

      Hint: Most pilots pay for their medicals out of their own pocket.

      And pilots really are paid piss-poor - after spending $50,000 getting your ATPL certificates and required hours to even go for an airliner, you get greeted with a whopping $20K/year job and shit routes. At a regional airline, since the big guys traditionally don't hire fresh new guys until they had a few thousand hours under their belt.

      Now, you can ask who are these crazy people who basically will spend 3/4s of a month away from their families for shit pay? Well, they're amongst the most dedicated pilots around - no one really does it out of necessity (I'm sure a McJob paying minimum wage would net you more, and you don't have flying school debt), so there's also an element of "don't ground me" involved as well. And given the really cyclical nature, you want to avoid any excuse to have your company lay you off.

      Of course, it's not all bleak - after a few years In the regionals, the pay does perk up some, Get left seat (captain) in a regional and you're looking at $50-70K, though most people jump to the airlines because even though you start at the bottom (typically - though airline backed regionals sometimes have seniority transfer), after a decade or so you can start getting paid in the 6 figures.

      But yeah, next time you're flying domestic, even with the airlines, the guy up front who is responsible for your safe arrival probably makes less than most of the /. crowd. (And no, when they're stopping over at a remote destination, they usually have to pay for their hotel, or sleep at the corporate office at the airport. At bigger hubs, a few pilots would often get together to pay for an apartment (lovingly called a "crash pad") to at least save on hotel bills and get a bit more peace and quiet away from the airport. It may only be a single room apartment where 3-4 (out of maybe 10 or so) will stay every night - the lucky one gets the bed, the next the sofa, everyone else lays a mattress on the floor.

    9. Re:Race to the bottom much? by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Just put two reasonably competent people in the cockpit at all times and stop trying to f**k an extra penny out of every dime, you cheap chiselling b*st*rds.

      That'll happen the day people stop using Expedia, Travelocity, and other such services and choosing ImaginaryAir flight 419 over Theta flight 271 because 419 is $0.15 cheaper.... and then the next time they make that trip, choosing Theta flight 271 because Theta has manged to squeeze and now it's $0.15 cheaper than ImaginaryAir 419.

      Seriously, practically everywhere it's touched the 'net has started a race to the bottom (cheapest price) - and, as always, such races have consequences. Sometimes, it's your local computer store or small bookstore going under - others, it's a load of passengers scattered across the terrain.

      And don't give me that bull about how it's all the airlines fault for cutting services. The airlines have discovered what every other big business has - as much as Americans whine about quality, service and all the other intangibles, the vast majority of the time their purchase decisions are driven by price.

  18. The airlines must not believe the tech is there by NotDrWho · · Score: 1

    If they did, they would already have automated cargo planes.

    --
    SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
  19. First, record and track whole flight remotely by jijitus · · Score: 1

    They plan on taking the pilot out of the plane, but can't get an economically viable solution for recording all flight information remotely?

  20. Perfect security by scotts13 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Anyone want to guarantee 100% perfect security for ANY wireless communication? Because if we have remotely piloted airliners (either because there's no pilot, or the pilot is suicidal) someone WILL hack into it.

    1. Re:Perfect security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Anyone want to guarantee 100% perfect security for ANY wireless communication? Because if we have remotely piloted airliners (either because there's no pilot, or the pilot is suicidal) someone WILL hack into it.

      Or 100% reliability for starters: it's 2015 and yet still you can easily lose your WiFi connection while sitting only 3 feet away from the access point.

    2. Re:Perfect security by meta-monkey · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Good point. Someone should recommend they not use home wifi routers for the mission-critical communications on commercial airliners.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    3. Re:Perfect security by GIL_Dude · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You wouldn't NEED to hack into it (although it is certainly a legitimate vector). Less technical "terrorists" could simply use enough force to take over a tower or control center and send commands from an authorized terminal (likely with an authorized ID gotten by the "rubber hose" method). You would then be able to proceed to down any planes in the control area of that tower. I think I would rather have the smarts controlling the plane (whether it be computer or pilot controlled) on the plane with outside access limited to when it is requested by at least a couple of members of the flight crew.

    4. Re:Perfect security by Rei · · Score: 4, Informative

      Anyone want to guarantee 100% perfect security for ANY wireless communication? Because if we have remotely piloted airliners (either because there's no pilot, or the pilot is suicidal) someone WILL hack into it.

      You have a large high power radio transmission tower (or the ability to jump airgaps into ATC transmission networks), and you also have the ability to break whatever message authentication / validation encryption system that such a remote piloting system would use? Cool! Followup question: are you the NSA, or is there another organization that I need to be worried about? Last question: wouldn't it have been about a hundred times easier for you just to buy a couple MANPADs?

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    5. Re:Perfect security by Rei · · Score: 1

      Or 100% reliability for starters: it's 2015 and yet still you can easily lose your WiFi connection while sitting only 3 feet away from the access point.

      Yeah, too bad there's not something called "autopilot" that could take over if communications are lost. Sadly, as we all know, the instant communications are lost, the plane will explode.

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    6. Re:Perfect security by Ksevio · · Score: 1

      Similarly, the terrorists could take over a nuclear power plant or military launch silo

    7. Re:Perfect security by RavenLrD20k · · Score: 2

      Because signals from commercial/industrial antennas cannot have interference or be actively jammed...

    8. Re:Perfect security by rot26 · · Score: 1

      Asshole. That's a national security secret.

      --



      To ensure perfect aim, shoot first and call whatever you hit the target
    9. Re:Perfect security by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 1

      Before you had to be a pilot and wait for the 2nd pilot to take a pee in order to crash a plane. Soon you can do it right from the comfort of your favorite OS.

      --
      Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
    10. Re:Perfect security by kheldan · · Score: 2

      Glad I'm not the first one to say this for a change.

      I wonder, however: How come I get shot down every single time I make a similar comment/observation about autonomous, driverless, manual-control-less cars? It's really not that different.

      Anyway.. If they want the ability to remote pilot commercial aircraft, that might not be a bad thing at all in emergency situations, so long as every effort is made to ensure the security of the system against hacking -- but there must still be a human pilot. Otherwise who the hell is going to trust it?

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    11. Re:Perfect security by dlingman · · Score: 1

      Wasn't that pretty much the plot from Die Hard 2?

    12. Re:Perfect security by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Because a button marked "don't listen to us", which once pressed passes all control over to their designated fall-back ATC, is sheer science fantasy. Unless the terrorists are so good you don't even know they're attacking you, they can't beat that.

    13. Re:Perfect security by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      Yeah, too bad there's not something called "autopilot" that could take over if communications are lost.

      In the "remote controller" system, the only reason you would need to rely on communications is if there were a major systems failure on board and the on-board pilot could not control the aircraft.

      In other words, at the time when communications becomes most critical, you are already experiencing systems failures that may make communications ineffective. Combine that with the potential for active jamming (DOS) at least and maybe a security issue that allows unauthorized remote control, and you've got a recipe for disaster.

      To those who say that a remote control operator can do as well as pilots on scene, keep in mind the DC9 (or DC10, I forget) that almost landed at Sioux City after a complete loss of hydraulics. Three pilots saved a lot of lives that day, and it would be impossible for that to have been done by a guy sitting in a dark room. Even if for no other reason than he wasn't invested in the process of saving that airplane. Now, if you make it a rule that anyone who takes such a remote controller job is executed if any aircraft he controls has a fatality, that might make him concentrate a bit harder.

    14. Re:Perfect security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      So, I'm a UAV pilot, for the military. Yes, we use NSA approved encryption. Yes, there are serious problems with the best of the state of the art right now. There's no way in hell that these things are safe to fly over populated areas, nor will be for the next decade. While the whining children are saying the FAA is being too stringent with the new small UAS regulations, the FAA has accepted an unacceptably high level of risk with their regulations. On the other hand, responsible design levels of assurance and certification on UAVs will make them completely unaffordable.

    15. Re:Perfect security by mjwalshe · · Score: 1

      All of which have large numbers of armed guards - presumably with fairly permissive engagement rules

      Even in gun fearing Britain back in the 50's the nuke police went armed

    16. Re:Perfect security by TonyXL · · Score: 1

      The US military drones have not yet been hacked.

    17. Re:Perfect security by mallyn · · Score: 1

      Well, I was at the Goodwill Bins (very famous Goodwill store here in Portland, Oregon) and I saw a pile of routers for cheep. Knowing how much the airline complain about money when they lower the pilots' salaries and now want to do away with the copilot; this might be a good source. :)

      --
      Most Respectfully Yours Mark Allyn Bellingham, Washington
    18. Re:Perfect security by barc0001 · · Score: 2

      >Okay 3, 2, 1, let's jam.

      Yes. That's one problem with any sort of mission critical wireless. It can be jammed by people with ill intent.

    19. Re:Perfect security by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      That struck me, too. Forget the terrorists and evil-doers. One good thunderstorm and suddenly your plane has no pilot.

    20. Re:Perfect security by Fortran+IV · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Same for the Air Canada flight that ran out of fuel halfway to its destination. It had Boeing's new "glass cockpit" with computer screens for everything, and guess what? When the engines died for lack of fuel, so did the computers. The crew were left with a handful of the most basic instruments; something like artificial horizon, airspeed, and altimeter.

      As I recall, the pilot landed that one safely because the plane had a mechanical backup system (an air turbine) that gave him minimal hydraulic power—and also because he was an experienced glider pilot who probably got more miles out of his starting altitude than most professionals (or computer systems) could have.

      --
      I figure by 2030 or so my 6-digit UID will be something to brag about.
    21. Re:Perfect security by Fortran+IV · · Score: 1
      --
      I figure by 2030 or so my 6-digit UID will be something to brag about.
    22. Re:Perfect security by Hairy1 · · Score: 1

      Actually not. Aircraft would not simply follow ATC instruction. They would use TCAS and TAWS to ensure that the aircraft did not fly into terrain or other aircraft. It would also ensure a proper approach and landing. There should be no way to send external commands to an aircraft to cause it to crash. The onboard computers should take the same position as a pilot; responsible for the safety of the passengers. If ATC gave instructions to fly into a mountain to a human pilot they wouldn't do it, and neither should a machine piloted aircraft.

    23. Re:Perfect security by RR · · Score: 1

      In the "remote controller" system, the only reason you would need to rely on communications is if there were a major systems failure on board and the on-board pilot could not control the aircraft.

      But sometimes the major systems failure is in the pilot life support systems. Helios Airways Flight 522 might have had a different outcome if the autopilot were programmed to land the plane, instead of just circling until it ran out of fuel.

      --
      Have a nice time.
    24. Re:Perfect security by Ksevio · · Score: 1

      Who says the air plane control rooms won't have large amounts of armed guards as well?

    25. Re:Perfect security by occasional_dabbler · · Score: 2
      I design aircraft engines for a living. Much as I am an early-adopter type I cannot agree with the assertion that a pilotless plane is safer than one with a man in the loop. At least not yet.

      The question is not whether we could build a plane that could fly itself safely, we already build plenty of those, they're called 'drones' and any modern airliner can be specced with options to fly itself from gate to gate on an ordinary day including typical bad weather. The question that is not being properly addressed is this: does having a human pilot avoid more accidents that would have happened, than they cause by error? It is very hard to quantify the former number but tragically easy to quantify the latter.

      --
      "Our opponent is an alien starship packed with atomic bombs," I said. "we have a protractor"
    26. Re:Perfect security by nospam007 · · Score: 1

      "They could. Granted those, unlike the towers, typically have armed patrols and are quite difficult to get in to."

      Not at all. As numerous environmental groups demonstrated, you just have to write a letter asking for a visit and ring the front door.

    27. Re:Perfect security by Rei · · Score: 1

      Not just the life support, either. Every piece of control hardware in the cockpit is a potential failure source. On ground you can have any number of backups sitting around, ready to switch to a different one at the flip of a switch.

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    28. Re:Perfect security by Rei · · Score: 1

      It is easy to quantify. And the quantification is "4/5ths of commercial airplane accidents are caused by humans doing the wrong thing".

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    29. Re:Perfect security by kharchenko · · Score: 1

      One of my favorite aviation stories!

    30. Re:Perfect security by michelcolman · · Score: 1

      It is easy to quantify. And the quantification is "4/5ths of commercial airplane accidents are caused by humans doing the wrong thing".

      Yes, like he said, it's tragically easy to quantify the latter. But what about the former, how many accidents are prevented by having a pilot on board? That's not such an easily available statistic but trust me, it's a lot higher. I've prevented my fair share of accidents (just doing my job like any other pilot, it's what we're trained to do) but haven't caused a single one.

    31. Re: Perfect security by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately by that time the plane ran out of fuel the passengers were long suffocated. Maybe the steward could have survived.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    32. Re:Perfect security by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Not legally, for most problems that would be a problem.

    33. Re: Perfect security by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      If it were onboard autopilot, it could also be programmed with emergency procedures. For example, when the plane detected insufficient cabin pressure (and deployed the masks), after not detecting pilot input, it could start decent to 10,000 ft, hopefully avoiding any serious injuries for hypoxia. Then continuing to lack input the plane could make an emergency landing before fuel exhaustion.

      If it were remote, telemetry should be going back to the operator to indicate cabin pressure problems, and checklist should say to descend the aircraft, minimizing potential injuries.

    34. Re:Perfect security by Michael+Woodhams · · Score: 1

      "... any modern airliner can be specced with options to fly itself from gate to gate on an ordinary day ..."
      Can you tell me more about this? My understanding is that taxiing and take off are always performed manually. Unless it surrendered control to a central airport system, I don't see how autotaxi would even be useful, as actions are so dependent on other traffic.

      --
      Quattuor res in hoc mundo sanctae sunt: libri, liberi, libertas et liberalitas.
    35. Re:Perfect security by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Mainly because the fault is always assigned as such. Like the Gimli Glider mentioned above, the Pilot flew with an "illegal" plane, after notes in the maintenance manual and the previous pilot indicated it was legal to fly. The Pilot also flew with insufficient fuel, after a metric conversion error indicated the wrong numbers. It was the pilot's fault they got into the situation. Also, after the incident, the crews who tested the flying after the failures, all failed to land the plane. The pilot caused the problem, and "fixed" the problem. The airline was at fault for letting a plane fly days with fuel gauge problems, as well as other failures in the incident.

      But what about problems like Air France 447? The computer was wrong, and the pilots did the wrong thing to make it worse. The pilots should have recovered from a stall without incident. They didn't. 100% pilot's fault, caused by a computer error that we have no idea how a computer would have handled.

    36. Re:Perfect security by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Wasn't that pretty much the plot from Die Hard 2?

      The plot was to impersonate the tower, not take it over. Taking over the tower of a western airport is pretty stupid as they know exactly where you are and how to cut off your access.

      A bigger threat is someone simply buying the access codes and/or authorised device from a country with less scruples.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    37. Re:Perfect security by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Have you seen Die Hard 2?

    38. Re:Perfect security by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      The Nuclear power plant I visited back in the late '70s did not have a "large number of armed guards" and the ones I visited in the '90s had at most one or two working the front gate, and no others visible (one even had zero armed guards, and the nuclear power plant was "guarded" by a door with a swipe-card access).

      Though the one with no guards isn't a self-sustaining nuclear reactor that creates power, but a fissionable nuclear reactor that exists to generate radiation for educational purposes. I'm sure a cyclotron with sub-critical levels of radioactive substances isn't high on the list for terrorists.

    39. Re:Perfect security by RavenLrD20k · · Score: 1

      So make sure you arrest the sun the next time it has a solar storm that takes out radio comms.

    40. Re:Perfect security by cwsumner · · Score: 1

      It is easy to quantify. And the quantification is "4/5ths of commercial airplane accidents are caused by humans doing the wrong thing".

      Or at least, the humans get blamed by the people that built the equipment.

      If you don't trust someone who is physically on the airplane, what makes you think that you can trust someone two years ago in a different city, writing software! 8-P

    41. Re:Perfect security by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      When's the last time that happened? I remember about 5 warnings in the last 10 years, and not a single one caused an interruption in the radio comms we were using.

    42. Re:Perfect security by occasional_dabbler · · Score: 1

      Thank you. I know plenty of pilots both socially and professionally. I know from what they tell me that, yep, that was one we wouldn't have foreseen, several times, per pilot. Yet you only get a maximum of one catastrophic event per pilot. I think it's quite possible that pilots avoid more than four otherwise-catastrophic events per career for the one they may cause.

      --
      "Our opponent is an alien starship packed with atomic bombs," I said. "we have a protractor"
    43. Re:Perfect security by occasional_dabbler · · Score: 1
      You have me, sir!

      I was using a little bit of hyperbole. Currently there are no aircraft equipped for auto-taxi or auto-take-off precisely because this is something that a human pilot can handle better than a machine. It is not even an option offered nor are airports equipped to support it. Auto pilot can be engaged immediately after wheels-up at about 500ft and in principle, with a Cat III aircraft and landing runway, it can fly the whole journey from there to the taxiway, where the pilot would once again take over.

      We already have the technology available to fill in those missing parts, should the need ever arise.

      --
      "Our opponent is an alien starship packed with atomic bombs," I said. "we have a protractor"
    44. Re:Perfect security by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      How come I get shot down every single time I make a similar comment/observation about autonomous, driverless, manual-control-less cars? It's really not that different.

      Because it's completely different. In one case, you have a remote driver with a connection of questionable reliability. In the other, you have a self-contained system that can't be jammed in a manner that wouldn't jam a human driver.

      Also, the reliability of human drivers is proven to be horrible. So a computer couldn't be worse. Or are you thinking that all self-driving cars will be vulnerable to hacking?

    45. Re:Perfect security by niftymitch · · Score: 1

      Anyone want to guarantee 100% perfect security for ANY wireless communication? Because if we have remotely piloted airliners (either because there's no pilot, or the pilot is suicidal) someone WILL hack into it.

      And anyone that had to listen to AM and FM radio including short wave for entertainment or news knows how
      fragile radio links can be. It is necessary to solve the lightning strike problem to 99.9999% or better.

      Fried communication, fried or interrupted systems that need to reboot, location sensors include GPS need
      to recover quickly.

      Protecting the current fly by wire systems is easier by a bunch.

      --
      Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn't. Mark Twain.
    46. Re:Perfect security by kheldan · · Score: 1

      You have no idea what you're talking about and need to go educate yourself on the subject before you comment on it again, OK? Also you lack a healthy level of paranoia; you seem to think the world is a safe place, when it's clearly not. You're also watching too much TV news, because you think all drivers are shit, and they're not, or maybe you're a shitty driver and you're projecting that onto everyone else. Yes, I'm being terribly rude to you, aren't I? I'm sick and tired of ignorant people with their ignorant, uninformed opinions. Get correct or get out.

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    47. Re:Perfect security by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      You have no idea what you're talking about and need to go educate yourself on the subject before you comment on it again, OK?

      You ask why you get modded down when you comment on self driving cars? The reason is that you are an asshole.

      I'm sick and tired of ignorant people with their ignorant, uninformed opinions. Get correct or get out.

      I know more about the subject than you do. That our opinions are different doesn't mean I'm factually wrong. You are the idiot that doesn't notice 40,000 dead people a year. If one jumbo jet a week crashed in the US, people would stop flying. But the equivalent death toll by car has idiots like you saying "drivers are not shit". They aren't? They die a lot for being so good at it.

    48. Re:Perfect security by kheldan · · Score: 1

      Yah? Fucking assholes like YOU are happy and willing to take away MY right to drive because YOU are scared little rabbits who can't accept the reality of the world, or perhaps you yourself are such a shit driver that you're willing to have some goddamned machine drive you around and never mind if it gets hacked, malfunctions, or otherwise gets you killed, while you stare out the windshield at the concrete abutment or cliff you're rushing towards. Get fucked, asshole. I am FAR from being alone in this, and we will FIGHT to keep ultimate control of our vehicles, despite what fucking cowards and idiots like YOU and your kind try to take it away from us. FYI you're just going to have to take the bus from now until your death, NOBODY is going to allow passenger vehicles on the road with no suite of manual controls OR sole occupants who are not trained, tested, and licensed to operate a motor vehicle, BET ON IT. Worthless fucking cowards like you are also likely the ones that keep voting away our privacy and freedom so you can feel 'safe', in which case: FUCK YOU. I am TIRED of people like you fucking up the future for everyone because you're too lazy and too cowardly.

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    49. Re:Perfect security by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I never said anything about taking away your right to drive. For one, you never had that right. It doesn't exist. For another, you are a lying sack of shit because I never said anything about stopping anyone from driving. You are an insane little piece of shit, and that's why you get modded down.

      You are the one voting away your own freedoms. I've voted in every presidential election since '92 (the first I was eligible to vote in), but managed to never vote for a winner. Anything other than that is supporting the system. Can you claim to have managed to have voted a "protest vote" every time? If not, you are supporting the system because abstinence is a vote for the winner. And all of the winners managed to remove rights of some kind.

      Or are you going to go into a rant where your party (I could presume, based on your insanity, but it doesn't matter) wasn't as bad as The Other Guy would have been?

  21. Remote link failure imply stand alone operation by jcdr · · Score: 2

    Remote operation imply data transfer, usually by radio, and this is the weakest part of the system. To ensure that the aircraft stay in safe operation without remote link, it fist must be able to sustain stand alone operation, including landing before running out of fuel.

    Concentrating control to a single point will increase the risk, concentrating control to a remote point will add an another layer of risk. The only solution is to allow distributed control, and this imply that each aircraft is able to operate safely by itself without remote control.

    If you are not convinced, just imagine that a remote control point is unable to operate for some reason: you have now dozen of flight without co-pilot and there need to all land as soon as possible, raising a another wave of problems.

    1. Re:Remote link failure imply stand alone operation by jcdr · · Score: 1

      all planes start circling at different altitudes until the system is working again..

      Certainly not an option for a failure that last longer than a single hour as aircraft will risk to run out of fuel. There is a chunk of documented incidents at ground level that affected a lot of flight and that lasted far more than a single hour. Aircraft need to be able to land automatically by itself without remote operation and there need to use it every day to ensure that the system is at the required safety level. There is nothing worst than a safety feature that is only used in case of a incident: most of the issues will be hidden until the incidents.

    2. Re:Remote link failure imply stand alone operation by jcdr · · Score: 1

      You forget that the link is only a link: the ground facility could be unable to operate for hours for any reason.

    3. Re:Remote link failure imply stand alone operation by jcdr · · Score: 1

      Radar failure rate show how fragile is a radio link. Now you have to remember that this link is required to have a kind of "ground based co-pilot". So the availability of the remote co-pilot will be far lower than a on board co-pilot, human or automate. The net result of a remote co-pilot is a decease of the safety level. On board automated co-pilot can potentially increase the safety level because it's possible to have multiple instance of them to increase there availability. It's a fairly simple logic. An other hint is that complex systems that need to maintain safety under degraded operational conditions use distributed autonomous subsystems not central radio link.

      If you are still not convinced, just look at accident reports where the stress on the flight deck required the full attention of the two pilots very quickly to save the situation. A remote co-pilot will be completely unable to do anything useful, especially if it already monitor multiples flights at the same time. An on board automated co-pilot can react immediately, and probably even faster than an human.

    4. Re:Remote link failure imply stand alone operation by jcdr · · Score: 1

      Sorry for my English, it's not my native language.

      Yes we fully agree that automation on board is the best solution. This is critically important for safety operation, far more than a remote co-pilot.

      From my point of view radar and radio are the same category of system as civil aircraft operator mostly use secondary radar that rely on a radio link to get back information from the aircraft. Primary ground radar will be useless for the aircraft until it send information to them, but this again depend on a radio link.

  22. Re:If it's not safe enough to have pilots... by NotDrWho · · Score: 1

    (one in a million pilots homicidal? replace pilots with computers!).

    I just got a flashback to the opening scenes of Wargames, when the Pentagon's response to the humanity of their nuclear launch commanders was to replace them with an automated system. They expected the automated system to be perfect, and a much better alternative to squishy emotional humans. I mean, it's TECHNOLOGY, right? What could possibly go wrong?

    --
    SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
  23. Typical Government Solution by Terry95 · · Score: 1

    Typical bureaucratic thinking. They created the problem by removing the crew's responsibility to protect their aircraft and replacing it with an impenetrable vault door. MANY failure modes were easily foreseeable 13 years ago. From suicidal pilots, to simple medical emergency, and a dozen others this was a stupid idea from people that didn't know what the hell they were talking about.

    Now rather than remove the problem, they want to double down on Central planning and control. Given the current bleeding edge state of the art technology and adding best case advancements over the next 10 years, I think I'll drive - and possibly buy an armored car to do that in as well because it is going to be raining airplanes. The one certainty is whatever their next plan is, it will be worse than the last and make us look back at 2 suicides in a decade as "the good old days".

  24. Gimli Glider by jfdavis668 · · Score: 1

    How about the Gimli Glider? If you run out of fuel, you suddenly have no power. Hard to run on automation without it. There have been a number of successful landings after a plane runs out of fuel, that could never have happened under automation. One of the success factors in USAirways flight 1549 was Capt. Sullenberger turning on the APU as soon as he realized he had no engines. Hard to do remotely when you are already disconnected.

    1. Re:Gimli Glider by Rei · · Score: 1

      Seriously, is this your argument? That we can't run a computing device on a battery?

      Everybody, throw your cell phones in the trash!

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    2. Re:Gimli Glider by jfdavis668 · · Score: 1

      Don't you think if it could run on a battery, it would already run on a battery? Not every plane is ultra-modern.

    3. Re:Gimli Glider by dave420 · · Score: 1

      It just needs a battery to power it long enough to deploy the APU. Problem solved.

    4. Re:Gimli Glider by jfdavis668 · · Score: 1

      The APU runs on fuel. The Gimli Glider had none, so no APU. USairways 1549 had fuel, but not functional engines, so the APU worked.

  25. Nonsense by snake_case_hoschi · · Score: 2

    I have wondered already, why the reckless ideas didn't poped up early and where invalided by sane arguments:
    * remote control means == remote attack vector/system error, could crash a thousand planes at once
    * humans can react indvidually on unknown problems (wrong and right, but at least they can)
    * never ever a sane person will give his life to a computer (did anyone trust windows? linux? macos?)
    * planes are not cars, if a computer on a car "fails" it will probably crash, if it fails on a plane *it will crash*

    And here an good example to trust pilots in case of emergency (german source):
    http://www.sueddeutsche.de/pan...

    Short:
    1. wrong sensor data
    2. computer believes sensors
    3. computer starts fast descent
    4. experienced pilot decides to turn of flight-computer
    5. 109 passenger saved ...
    5. airbus releases updates for flight-computer and new manual for pilots

    This story was released only four days before the tragic incident with Germanwings. Flight number "LH 1829" means Lufthansa, same basically same airline.

  26. Re:Shifting the risk by Rei · · Score: 1

    Right, because system designers are idiots who are going to design the system suchly that a single rogue operator can take control of a dozen planes in a couple minutes time with nobody noticing and being able to stop him?

    Even regular ATC centers are secure facilities with dozens of people - let alone any special "emergency situation" centre. Any attempt to take control of a plane from a pilot due to a thread that the pilot may be suicidal or a terrorist would be a Really Big F'Ing Deal that not only would bare minimum require shiftsup authorization, but is something that bloody everyone not just in the centre would hear about, but potentially all the way up to world leaders. It's not going to be Johnny Sneakymouse hitting the "crash" button a dozen times when nobody is looking. Because system designers aren't bloody morons.

    --
    Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
  27. What could possibly go wrong? by g0bshiTe · · Score: 1

    It makes complete sense we can't agree nor have widespread self driving cars, fuck it! Let's do planes instead.

    Sometimes do you read headlines and think what the fuck?

    --
    I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
  28. One black swan and they go crazy... by gweihir · · Score: 2

    What about a bit of actually professional risk management? That one says this is an event that is exceptionally rare and that hence does not need countermeasures. The very extent of the press-coverage shows how exceptionally rare it was.

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  29. So right by snake_case_hoschi · · Score: 1

    Thank you!
    You're right by logic and feelings at once.

  30. Jamming not Hacking by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 5, Interesting

    someone WILL hack into it.

    It's worse than that - all they need to do is jam it which would be trivially easy to do. For example if you put powerful transmitters into a van, parked it somewhere on the approach path to a busy airport and turned it on you would suddenly have craft who were on approach lose all control and by the time authorities tracked down the van and shut it off who knows how many planes would have crashed.

    Remote control planes with passengers on are a stupendously bad idea. There is no way I'm flying on a plane which is not under the control of someone onboard whose life also depends on the plane landing safely. Even with such a strong motivation as that we have seen disaster happen - how much more likely will it be if the pilots are sitting remotely and have even less at stake? Suddenly things like disgruntled employees crashing planes becomes imaginable.

    1. Re:Jamming not Hacking by Rei · · Score: 1

      you would suddenly have craft who were on approach lose all control and by the time authorities tracked down the van and shut it off who knows how many planes would have crashed.

      Right, as if autoland doesn't exist?

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    2. Re:Jamming not Hacking by Deadstick · · Score: 1

      Right, as if autoland doesn't exist?

      It gets its information from ground-based transmitters.

    3. Re:Jamming not Hacking by Deadstick · · Score: 1

      There is no way I'm flying on a plane which is not under the control of someone onboard whose life also depends on the plane landing safely.

      Precisely. Part of the pilot's job is to be hostage to the safety of the passengers.

    4. Re:Jamming not Hacking by disposable60 · · Score: 1

      I suppose you could strap a remote pilot into a seat that's rigged to do something painful/fatal if the plane crashes. My objection echoes one above - there's a lot a pilot can feel about how the craft is behaving that no set of sensors can replicate remotely.

      --
      You're looking for quotes? See my journal.
    5. Re:Jamming not Hacking by Rei · · Score: 1

      Oh wait, you're talking not just about jamming the datalink signal, but also ILS and LPS? Nice jammer you've got. So, how exactly does remote control come into play? If you screw up the signal, you can already crash the plane, pilot or none. There was a pilot on THY726. The plane still crashed. They trust ILS and LPS because the data is usually more accurate than their own senses.

      (Plus, it's not even remotely hard to picture additional workarounds that could be added, such as radar, laser, microwave, or ultrasound distance sensors.)

      --
      Trump's plan to get rid of Mueller appears to be 'be so guilty of so many things that Mueller works himself to death.'
    6. Re:Jamming not Hacking by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      Right, as if autoland doesn't exist?

      ...and does autonomous traffic avoidance in the crowded skies on approach to a busy airport? There are planes in holding patterns, on approach to land, transitioning between the too, taking off etc. etc. Even with fantastically well trained, intelligent human pilots onboard we need central coordination to avoid disaster otherwise why would we have air traffic control? How much more likely would disaster be if all those planes suddenly found themselves without a pilot?

    7. Re:Jamming not Hacking by barc0001 · · Score: 1

      On the one hand that sounds unlikely as autopilots on planes are already quite capable of landing a plane if the need arose in anything but the most adverse weather and if the ground connection were jammed or otherwise cut off the planes would have alternative instructions like diverting to another airport or if it was on final approach and the autopilot assessed the landing as do-able then it would just land by itself. On the other hand, a "Die Hard 2" weather situation would be the kind of scenario where what you describe would be possible. Forcing the plane into a situation where the autopilot might not be able to easily manage severely adverse weather but is also cut off from external control would be about the only time I would foresee that as an issue with just jamming.

    8. Re:Jamming not Hacking by MattskEE · · Score: 1

      Oh wait, you're talking not just about jamming the datalink signal, but also ILS and LPS? Nice jammer you've got.

      Jammers are not technologically difficult, if you have enough money to build/buy 1 jammer it's not a stretch to add 2 more.

    9. Re:Jamming not Hacking by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      Right, as if autoland doesn't exist?

      For many aircraft and many airports, it doesn't. I would go so far as to say "most".

      And if the ILS being used fails, for example someone transmits a strong lower beam signal (creating a full scale "too low" indication), the landing has to be aborted.

    10. Re:Jamming not Hacking by deadweight · · Score: 1

      You are NOT sending an airplane to a different airport messing with the ILS. Making the large assumption you can send a false signal without the receiver on the other end just popping up an errror flag from 2 competing signals, you can make the plane go too far left - right - up -down in relation to the desired path to the runway and thus make it miss the runway and perhaps crash. Depending on what equipment was on the airplane, it would be more or less obvious to the pilot. If you are backing up the ILS with a GPS derrived glideslope it would be fairly obvious. You would have to be fairly close to the airport to do this. At least one airplane was wrecked with way in WW II by the Germans sneaking a transmitter near an airfield.

    11. Re:Jamming not Hacking by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      Listen, there are smart people in these fields.

      Indeed there are smart people but that does not mean that they always get the right answer. In my own field of particle physics there was an experiment a few years ago that persuaded itself that they had evidence of faster than light neutrinos. Everyone outside that experiment, without the expert knowledge of the detector which this group had, decided that this had to be due to a mistake and sure enough it turned out that they did not have a GPS cable plugged in correctly.

      Moral of the story: being smart does not make you immune from coming up with stupid ideas. It is never wrong to question new ideas which appear to have flaws. If there is a good reason why such criticisms are wrong the experts should be able to explain why.

      ...few jetliners crash due to mechanical or a computer system error.

      True but isn't that precisely because they have a pilot on board? How many times is there a mechanical glitch or system failure which leads to no serious problem at all because the pilots takeover and do things manually? How many times is there a situation where the pilots can do something creative to save the plane like landing on the Hudson river?

  31. The cockpit of the future by eis2718bob · · Score: 3, Funny

    It's a very old joke by now but...

    The cockpit of the future will have two seats - for a pilot and a dog. The dog's job is to bite the pilot if he touches anything.

    The pilot's job is to feed the dog.

  32. This is the damage by koan · · Score: 1

    This is what tech has done for us in the bad sense, it appears to me people no longer want to work with people, but rather will look to find a way without them, to use a machine rather than a human.

    In some odd way our technological modern lives are causing to dislike humanity.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  33. Seems to Miss The Point by wisnoskij · · Score: 2

    If we want to prevent suicidal pilots, removing the second pilot, the only one capable of stopping him, is definitely not going to help with this. This is strictly a money saving venture, that will remove a layer of safety and redundancy.

    --
    Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    1. Re:Seems to Miss The Point by rastos1 · · Score: 1

      It will reduce number of suicidal pilots by one half !

  34. Polar routes by gatkinso · · Score: 1

    Having supported NASA Global Hawk missions over the poles, I can tell you that high bandwidth satellite communications becomes dicey over the poles. We would fallback to Iridium... which was less than ideal and totally unsuitable for command and control. This was not a huge issue, should the plane have lost C2 comms it would simply return to base.

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  35. IoT - Internet of Terrorists ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    So you want to give the bad guys a way to take over control of a plane remotely and crash land it into a big city, without even needing to die in the accident themselves ?
    Sounds like a terrorists wet-dream...
    And I am not used to do "think of the children" kind of spech, but allowing anyone outside the plane to take over control is the dumbest idea I ever heard.

    And you know it is dumb because at commercial scale such a system would be full of explitable holes, and a determined person *will* get into the system and take control of a plane.

  36. Re:Bandwidth? by silas_moeckel · · Score: 1

    Aircraft have clear line of sight to the sky pretty much anytime they are not in a hanger. Main issue is that induces a lot of lag (to geo stationary at least). You could order an AI around but flying when you need to react quickly is not going to happen.

    --
    No sir I dont like it.
  37. I suspect this will be a lot like cars by argStyopa · · Score: 1

    I guess we'd need to see the statistics for the failure-rate of drone flights, not just for 'mission terminating'-level incidents, but for every crack-up on landing etc that would cause passengers problems. Compare this to the failure-rates of flights that are human-piloted, including to some degree the number of 'cockpit events' where a pilot's human reflexes and situational awareness avoided an incident entirely.

    Most likely, it's not even close. Planes are still staggeringly safer in the hands of human pilots - even recognizing their very-human fallibilities - than computer piloted.

    In the same sense that people have greater fear of flying than driving (despite ample evidence as to which is more dangerous), while people will cheerfully get into driverless cars, I suspect pilotless airplanes will never...ahem... 'take off'.

    --
    -Styopa
  38. Situational awareness by sjbe · · Score: 1

    So instead of having two pilots, why not have a computer monitoring system that actively monitors airplanes with only 1 pilot in it. Any weird actions by the pilot would trigger a warning allowing ground operators to override it. Boom, no more missing planes, or suicidal pilots.

    Ok, Define "weird actions". What specific circumstances does the computer take over? How do you plan to have a computer program with adequate situational awareness to never make a mistake when overriding the controls? Remember, you are by definition working with weird corner cases here.

    Just saying "let the computer override" is a nice notion that isn't really reasonable when you actually think about the details of what is occurring. Computers cannot generally deal with situations that were not considered in advance nor are they very good at certain types of situational awareness.

  39. Horse, cart by fulldecent · · Score: 3, Insightful

    90%+ of comments here have been regarding lack of onboard pilots with commercial passenger flights.

    Naturally, the first offboard pilot flights would be with cargo only. And that is way more relevant and less sexy discussion.

    --

    -- I was raised on the command line, bitch

    1. Re:Horse, cart by khchung · · Score: 1

      90%+ of comments here have been regarding lack of onboard pilots with commercial passenger flights.

      Naturally, the first offboard pilot flights would be with cargo only. And that is way more relevant and less sexy discussion.

      It is the same on stories about autonomous cars. 90%+ comments talk about how *they* prefer to be in control of the vehicle, while the most economically beneficial application is for trucks.

      --
      Oliver.
    2. Re:Horse, cart by fulldecent · · Score: 1

      Yes... trucks driving on empty roads at midnight

      --

      -- I was raised on the command line, bitch

  40. Makes no sense whatsoever by jonwil · · Score: 2

    The number of people saved over the years by pilots doing things with airplanes that no computer system (or remote operator) could ever have done vastly outnumbers the number of people killed because of deliberate actions by pilots.

    Examples of such heroic flights where lives may not have been saved without pilots in the cockpit include:
    US Airways Flight 1549
    British Airways Flight 9
    Air Canada Flight 143
    British Airways Flight 38
    Northwest Airlines Flight 85
    TACA Flight 110
    United Airlines Flight 232
    Reeve Aleutian Airways Flight 8

  41. Ever and ever cheapening by tekrat · · Score: 1

    Ah, the race to the bottom. And at what point will the Minimum Wage TSA agents be remotely flying the planes? And then the airlines get the bright idea to outsource all that to India or maybe Vietnam?

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
  42. Knee-jerk reactions and captaincy by bkmoore · · Score: 1

    What the article in NYT seems to omit is that the German Wings mishap could have been prevented if the Captain was able to regain access to the cockpit. But in the politically-charged aftermath of 9-11, we mandated a cockpit-door system on aircraft that under certain circumstances has no back up option for the event that the captain is locked out of the cockpit. A more careful analysis of all the risk at the time might have produced a system with at least some means available for the Captain to open the door from the outside if necessary. Going pilotless falls into the same category of reactive thinking because it is creating another system without any backups. Computers may not be suicidal and they may not make the same kinds of mistakes that human pilots make, but they do make different ones. What's missing from the NYT article is information about the safety record for pilotless aircraft. They can and do fail. Good aviation safety requires taking into account the big picture and making educated tradeoffs to minimize the total risk. Quick fixes or knee-jerk reactions often end up creating new hazards and often increase the total level of risk.

    I think a lot of the automation proponents are missing the point and fail to understand the role of a pilot in command of an aircraft. He is not just there to steer the aircraft. He is there to accept and take responsibility for the safety and well being of the aircraft and all those who are riding on it. If we go pilotless, who will check the maintenance records and accept that the aircraft is air worthy? Who is responsible for ensuring that the weather meets minimums? Who is responsible for ensuring that the aircraft is properly loaded and balanced and that the fuel load is adequate for the planed flight and any unplanned contingencies? I would rather trust a person who's ass is sitting in the same aircraft than some faceless manager who is sitting the ground who presses "GO". We have known for at least the past 1000 years the importance of having one person on board who is in charge who has the authority to make decisions when things go wrong. Technology will not change this.

  43. Reasons? by sjbe · · Score: 1

    As a pilot, I would never fly an aircraft which has a remote capability to take control away from me.

    Fair enough, why? What specific objective reason(s) causes you to oppose the idea completely? I'm not for or against the idea but I'd like to hear why it is a good or bad idea. I understand the issue of situational awareness by the remote operator could be an issue. What else?

    To suddenly decide that we can't trust the crew despite the fantastic safety record aviation has is just ludicrous.

    Agreed though that also doesn't mean we shouldn't analyze the situation thoroughly to see if anything can practically be done. I generally share your sentiment that the safety record of aviation is great but it got that way by carefully examining disasters to see if any improvements could be made. Maybe there is an opportunity of some sort here to introduce improvements.

    1. Re:Reasons? by BostonPilot · · Score: 1

      As a pilot, I would never fly an aircraft which has a remote capability to take control away from me.

      Fair enough, why? What specific objective reason(s) causes you to oppose the idea completely? I'm not for or against the idea but I'd like to hear why it is a good or bad idea. I understand the issue of situational awareness by the remote operator could be an issue. What else?

      Because when I'm the Pilot In Command it means exactly that: I'm in command, and I'll pay with my life for the mistakes I make. That won't be true of people on the ground. If you don't want me in command, don't put me in command in the first place. I again refer to United Airlines 232. Why did that crew save 2/3 of the passengers when subsequent attempts in the simulator by other crews failed 100% of the time? One reason was probably motivation. Their lives were on the line. As a passenger I much more likely to trust the crew who's lives on are the line, than some guy on the ground trying to second guess them.

      Also, I very much doubt you can construct a safe system which allows you to take control away from the crew. How do you implement that in a way which can't take control erroneously, yet can't be disabled by a suicidal crew? I very much doubt it can be done.

      To suddenly decide that we can't trust the crew despite the fantastic safety record aviation has is just ludicrous.

      Agreed though that also doesn't mean we shouldn't analyze the situation thoroughly to see if anything can practically be done. I generally share your sentiment that the safety record of aviation is great but it got that way by carefully examining disasters to see if any improvements could be made. Maybe there is an opportunity of some sort here to introduce improvements.

      I said that in the original posting - more screening and evaluation of crew is probably needed. And the USA rule of "never one person alone in the cockpit" should be adopted world wide. But trying to take command away from the crew while in flight will cause many more problems then it would ever solve.

  44. Are you INSANE? by ckatko · · Score: 1

    >NASA is exploring a related possibility: moving the co-pilot out of the cockpit on commercial flights, and instead using a single remote operator to serve as co-pilot for multiple aircraft.

    Could you imagine what would happen to the person flying an aircraft in an emergency that crashes? That'd be like the captain not going down with the ship, and if anyone remembers South Korea, that did not end well at all. They'd want his bloody head on a stick. The only reason people don't go after pilots when a plane kills their loved ones is because the pilots are already dead!

  45. 1d vs 3D transportation by Dr.+Bombay · · Score: 1

    We don't even have trains being run by computers yet and there is no driving involved, just acceleration and deceleration. Not only that, proper tailoring of acc/dec curves can save tremendous amounts of fuel. While successfully navigating a car in 2D or a plane in 3D may be much cooler than the mundane operation of a freight or passenger train, until we can have zero train accidents through the use of driverless trains, discussion of other forms of driverless transportation is premature.

    1. Re:1d vs 3D transportation by onkelonkel · · Score: 1

      The Skytrain LRT system in Vancouver has been driverless since it was first built back in 86. This is most definitely a train being run by a computer, and it has an excellenmt safety record.

      --
      None of them can see the clouds; The polished wings don't care.
  46. Not anytime soon by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 1

    Given how much time it takes for air safety organizations to approve a new technology aboard a plane cockpit, pilot-less civil airplanes are not for tomorrow. Keep this story in the freezer for another 20 years.

    --
    Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
  47. On Site is Best by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

    As a Sys Admin who works on many remote servers and systems, I will say that there is nothing like being on site. I think that holds true in this scenario as well.

    --
    "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  48. Re:There's a better alternative by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

    Automate the passengers. Problem solved. Forever.

    PR and advertizing firms are doing their best!

    --
    "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  49. Re:That's not risk management by gweihir · · Score: 1

    I am well aware of that. The cost * probability is still completely irrelevant compared to other risks in transportation. Also, the "rare" class has an exceptionally high probability of countermeasures harming instead of helping, as they cannot be tested in the real situation.

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  50. Automation by sjbe · · Score: 1

    We don't even have automated trains and they run on freaking tracks

    We absolutely do have automated trains in service today. Automated trains are actually fairly easy to do.

    honestly it's not a huge technical issue to get rid of the pilot

    Not even remotely true. It's achievable but hardly trivial.

    at any moment there are many UAVs flying around autonomously

    Most are not generally autonomous though there are some. Most are remotely piloted

  51. Some considerations by prefec2 · · Score: 1

    First, a remote pilot can go amok just as easy than an on board pilot. Actually, he or she can do this even easier. So that would not help to solve the crazy people crashing planes in mountains problem (even though this is a very seldom cause). Therefore, only complete automation would be sufficient to heel this problem. Second, robot planes rely on instrumentation just like normal pilots. However, they only know those things about the world programmers have introduced into their programming. They cannot think outside the box. Therefore, they might come to the wrong conclusions for certain situations. We must therefore evaluate how often that is the case in comparison to human pilot error. Third, for people to use a completely automated plane, they must be convinced that such planes are safer than human controlled planes. This can be achieved by using automated planes for cargo first.

    All in all, I assume that there is not much to be gained by automating flight. So this automation idea will most likely be dropped again as before.

  52. IFR vs VFR by gman003 · · Score: 1

    There are two types of flying: instrument flight rules, and visual flight rules.

    IFR is used at night, when the weather restricts visibility to under a certain amount (thick cloud cover can do this, no precipitation needed), on flights long enough that you can't guarantee VFR conditions at your destination, and just whenever you feel like it.

    VFR is generally only used for beginning pilots or quick flights. It's sometimes seen as a relic of earlier times. Sure, you get taught how to fly this way, get taught some basic dead reckoning techniques, but nobody really flies this way, most of the time.

    But instruments fail. Autopilots fail. Engines fail. When everything fails, you want someone in the cockpit who can look out the window, navigate by landmarks, and if necessary put the plane down on the straight sections of highway Eisenhower built to accommodate bombers returning from the Soviet Union.

    When things go wrong, you want something smart and adaptable in control. There are procedures for damn near everything in aviation, but there's still things you can't pre-plan for. Until we get a general strong AI working, the only thing smart and adaptable enough is a human.

    Now, that doesn't mean we can't have fully computer-controlled aircraft. It just means there shouldn't be people on board those computer-controlled planes. Drones are fine - even if it's a cargo-laden drone version of a 747, the loss of life it can accidentally cause is miniscule, compared to even a small passenger plane.

  53. Which is more tech? A computer or a human brain? by Aristos+Mazer · · Score: 1

    Consider the comment at the end of the summary: "If you put more technology in the cockpit, you have more technology that can fail."
    We just had a human brain fail -- in the computer sense -- in Europe. I sometimes wonder whether we have too much tech in the cockpit right now. A computer that stays focused on the act of flying as fewer mental "moving parts" than a human brain that has a life outside the cockpit.

  54. Re:Kind of silly by Aristos+Mazer · · Score: 1

    Depends. How much do airlines pay in insurance to cover the possibility of disasters? How much would that decrease through automation?
    How much do they pay in maintenance? How much would that decrease if the plane were always piloted exactly as spec'd?
    There's many variables that come into play that could easily make this financially viable. I don't know enough about the industry to say whether or not it would actually be.

  55. Another Industry Trying to Automate Away Workers by Irate+Engineer · · Score: 1

    Labor is about 35% of the operating expense of an airline. Fuel is a distant second. Pilots are the some of the pricier elements of that labor pool, and are often unionized and do strike on occasion. Bean counters just love the idea of taking them off the spreadsheet through the magic of modern technology.

    The airlines would love to see these aircraft running on a subway model - no attendants or pilots, maybe one person on the ground monitoring that the airplane stays on track. Just put a soda machine on each plane, one that takes credit card and charges $10 for an RC Cola (Coca Cola is $15 for 1st class only). Send a cleaner through once a day. No carpeting or upholstery, need to be able to hose it out quickly. Complaints? No one on the plane to listen to them except the other equally disgruntled fellow passengers.

    --

    Left MS Windows for Linux Mint and never looked back!

    Vote for Bernie in 2016!

  56. World Without People by StikyPad · · Score: 1

    Necessary? No. Planes have been technically capable of fully autonomous flight since the 90s. Pilots have remained in the cockpit for two reasons: unions, and consumer trust.

    But the bigger question is this: Is there a technological solution to a social problem? The social problem is people wanting to harm others with as little effort as possible. Does remote or automated flight raise or lower that bar? From a physical security standpoint, not much has changed -- you *still* need to prevent physical access to the systems, because with physical access, all bets are off. But additionally, you also now need to provide cybersecurity for all aspects of the flight control, from the systems where automated software is coded, to (possibly) remote control locations, to the planes themselves. And imagine being able to control hundreds of planes at once instead of just one.

    In my view, technology is not the answer to questions of air security. It may make sense for other reasons -- cost, optimal flight parameters, reliability -- and those reasons may well outweigh security, but it doesn't remove the need to trust. Whether you're trusting hardware engineers, software developers, technicians installing the hardware or firmware, or pilots. There may be ways to raise that level of trust, and that's worth looking at, but simply moving the goalpost doesn't remove trust from the equation.

  57. Pilots are like clocks by WaffleMonster · · Score: 1

    It almost seems as if Hanlon's Razor is actively working to reassert itself in the commercial airline space.

    Give me a break commercial Airline industry can't even be bothered to integrity protect basic routine communications with aircraft and now people are chattering about remote controls.

  58. Re:and we will need basic income to cover the peop by blue9steel · · Score: 1

    Airlines are already complaining about a shortage of pilots today.

    Shortage of pilots, hah, that's a good one. Do you have any idea how many people are trying to become professional pilots? There are so many it drives the wages down to ridiculously low levels compared to the cost of training and certification.

  59. Sounds familiar by blue9steel · · Score: 1

    Apparently Marshall Brain knows what he's talking about after all. http://marshallbrain.com/robot...

  60. Don't think replacing the pilots is right by MrJones · · Score: 1

    I think a more practical approach is to don't allow the pilots to crash the plane on a mountain. Humans are still needed in the cockpit, just remember the Hudson River Pilot. What would a computer do in that situation?

    --
    Get my e-mail after a captcha test in: http://tinymailt
  61. Air Disasters by Moof123 · · Score: 1

    In watching "Air Disasters" and in seeing post mortems of many accidents and near accidents, I have a hard time seeing that any solution will be better than what we have today.

    In some cases weather radar is deceptive, with so much of a crap storm reflecting radar that you can't see the even bigger crap storm behind it and end up steering into an even worse storm than you think you are escapsing.

    Sometimes you lose all hydraulics and have to feather the throttle to steer the plane.

    Sometimes ducks destroy the engines and you have to land in the Hudson.

    Sometimes you spend too much time fiddling with the autopilot that you respond badly when the sensors ice up or get jammed with a mud spider nest that you ride a stall all the way to the ground. I see bad sensor readings being a case where either an autopilot or a remote co-pilot will have even worse odds than what we have today.

    It all boils down to us having an amazingly safe system today, and being careful not to throw the baby out with the bathwater.

  62. What if the AI just prevents disaster? by AnontheDestroyer · · Score: 1

    Why not have AI that doesn't fly the plane non-stop, but instead detects egregious attempts to down the plane, and overrides them? Or calls this fancy, distant co-pilot to take over?

  63. Hacking by Gliscameria · · Score: 1

    I still think that well trained people are harder to hack than software, currently. The main issue is that if you manage to hack a person into wrecking a plane, that just works on the one person. If you hack the software for a plane you can hack all of the planes. That's really my only concern about self driving cars. If a car or two here and there freak out and crash it's still safer than people, but if you can somehow manage to freak them all out...

    --
    X
  64. Pilot+Copilot = 4X cost increase by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    At the (relatively low) burdened wage of $50/hr, you've both increased you costs by 50% and reduced your flight capacity by 25%. Need a co-pilot? You've doubled your flight cost per hour and halved your available payload, Congratulations, you've just increased the cost to fly by a factor of 4.

    Not that anyone is flying a 172 for commercial purposes, but $100/hr for four passengers ($25/hr/passenger) vs $200/hr for two passengers ($100/hr/passenger) is a pretty big difference.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  65. Some comments from a REAL pilot on that idea. by Ken+Hall · · Score: 1

    http://www.askthepilot.com/germanwings-crash/

  66. simple, really by Tom · · Score: 1

    Computers sometimes fail. So do humans. The best way to not be at the mercy of either is to have both. There's at least one incident on record where malfunctioning sensors told a plane computer that it was 4000 feet higher than it actually was, and it would've happily crashed into the ground during descent if the pilot hadn't looked out the window to say "wtf, that's the ground right there".

    At HAL 2001, yes that was 14 years ago, there was a speech with the title "why my space ship will not run Linux" and that's as true today as it was back then: Our current software, from firmware and operating system to applications, is total crap, incredibly shoddy, and half of it is being held together by spit and duct tape. Fact is that while we make progress (and not a little, actually it's quite amazing), we still don't know how to write really good software. We know a bit about how to teach humans to write pretty good software, even though most companies use 10% of that knowledge in real production (mostly because next-quarter focussed managers don't understand the incredibly good ROI on high software quality).
    But a lot of that knowledge is about software development processes.

    But do we know how to make a non-trivial computer program that is guaranteed to behave correctly? How much software with an EAL5, EAL6 or EAL7 certification do you know? Wait, you can check here. Not very many.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  67. no way in hell by l3v1 · · Score: 1

    I've been on planes landing in ridiculously high side-winds that I'd have a really hard time believing an autopilot could ever land safely, or for that matter, a human controlling the plane remotely - for the simple reason, that in these cases one needs to actually 'feel' how the plane reacts, and neither an autopilot, nor a remote joystick-operator can accomplish that. On a sidenote, there is no way in hell I'd trust hundreds on human lives to an autopilot built with technologies that we have today - what we call artificial intelligence, and what we have as machine learning are so far from such a thing, that it's not even funny. Unless we'll have R. Daneel Olivaw piloting that plane, I'm not boarding it :P

    --
    I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
  68. Middle ground by terjeber · · Score: 1

    No pilots is probably going too far, but what about refusing to do stupid shit? A plane has GPS, it knows how high it is. Why would it even allow a pilot to crash into a mountain? Trying to land a plane in an area that is not an airport should require some sort of manual override by either two pilots or pilot plus ground crew. The computer could even give full control to pilot in case of emergencies (Sully).

  69. Go down with the "ship"... by cmeans · · Score: 1

    Remote pilots probably don't feel the same level of anxiety as one aboard a craft that's in trouble...it might also mean that, because the remote pilot isn't in any danger, they might not put enough effort into trying to save the craft.

    So long as, if a plane goes down and a "present" (on board) pilot would have died, the remote pilot is shot-on-the-spot, I think that'll work as providing enough incentive for them to make sure the craft doesn't crash.

    Just my thoughts.

  70. Re:Shifting the risk by cwsumner · · Score: 1

    ... Because system designers aren't bloody morons.

    Well... most of them are not morons. But some of them are, in at least some situations. Just look at the security provisions in a lot of businesses, that are getting hacked!

    And I say that as a Systems Engineer.

  71. What if a suicidal remote pilot shows up for work? by martinfb · · Score: 1

    Remote piloting opens up another problem: murderous remote pilots. Now they can survive a crash to cause another!

    --


    Self-importance and self-indulgence is the root of ALL evil.
  72. Sheesh by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1
    We've become so reactionary that we would exchange one possible failure mode for another.

    I mean, what could go wrong?

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  73. Aren't Airbuses designed to fly? by nessman · · Score: 1

    Here's what I don't get. You got an advanced plane like the A320 that has all sorts of fail-safes built in to it to prevent the dopey pilot from making a sudden move and crashing the damn thing. But nothing to say "hey - I'm flying at over 400 kts, the left seat is empty, the cockpit door is locked / overriding the keypad, and the dope in the right seat just told my autopilot to descend to 100 feet above sea level when what's in front of me are mountains that are much higher than that and he's increasing my speed too... maybe I should take over and resume level flight well above terrain - seeing how sensors indicate all is well with the aircraft, squawk 7700 on the transponder, start spitting out what's happening on ACARS, open the door and wait until the left seat is occupied and this gets sorted out".

    As for flights like AF447 - when things like pitots and pressure sensors stop functioning, the plane should then revert to GPS to give the pilots a referential ground speed (yes I understand the difference between that and air speed... but when your pitots shit the bed... what else do you got?), direction and altitude... along with rate of climb/descent, and basic navigation like a waypoint to the airfield. Because in the middle of the night over the ocean you're flying on instruments. When your instruments go out and all you see is pitch black outside - you're fucked. A $99 Garmin GPS will do this. A free GPS app for your smartphone will do this.