Your first choice isn’t always right. So keep turning! Plot from AA flight ORD to DCA.
Looks like they ended up on the upwind side of the storm, almost always a better place to be, even if it is a longer track.
Your first choice isn’t always right. So keep turning! Plot from AA flight ORD to DCA.
Looks like they ended up on the upwind side of the storm, almost always a better place to be, even if it is a longer track.
I’m going to let the dust settle before addressing this issue fully. But right now the Washington Post has a great article on the FAA/NTSB automation debate. And the full FAA IG report is online here.
“We’ve recommended that pilots have more opportunity to practice manually flying the aircraft.”
Robert L. Sumwalt, who spent 32 years as an airline pilot before joining the NTSB in 2006.

How much longer am I going to do this?
I don’t know. I love it, you see.Anthony Bourdain, Chef.
Writing about 27 years of cooking professionally,
in his book ‘Kitchen Confidential’.
He wrote that in 2000. Fifteen years later he is still going strong. If you want to be good, you have to love the doing.

“It is never finished. I don’t have a sense of triumph or resting on laurels. I am quite a restless person. I just want to fly. I wish I was leaving tomorrow and flying on.”
Tracey Curtis-Taylor.
After flying an open-cockpit biplane England to Australia.
Sounds like she knows of the perpetual pursuit …

Her website is www.birdinabiplane.com, some great press reports of her 21,000 km journey in The Telegraph and The Guardian.
Alan Watts would have turned 101 yrs-old today. This is an excellent comic page from Zen Pencils illustrating one of his quotes, the full “What would you like to do if money were no object.”
For me the answer is easy. Fly airplanes.