With a holistic and rigorous focus on sustainability, Slow Factory works on integrative solutions, mainly for the urban environment. Current themes include: Bicycles with Public Transport; Dogs on Public Transport; Re-defining pets/companion animals as "Family animals". Also, on this Blog and other forums we take a critical approach regarding the crossroads of city life & politics, corporations/industry, language, advertising and media.
Sunday, June 13, 2010
"Unmanned Commercial Flights Could Become A Reality"
Ha ha ha, I sometimes cannot believe the crap they spend our money on.
From PSFK: "The US Federal Aviation Administration is undertaking a research project to explore the possibilities of pilotless commercial flights. The project is part of its NextGen initiative which is aimed at modernizing the country’s flight infrastructure."
At first all lifts had an operator, now almost none do and no one questions it. Driver-less metros have been operating for some time in many places and are said to have improved things by reducing operator errors, but they operate on a track, in two dimensions.
Are there plans for captain-less boats and ships? Or riderless bicycles?
Better might be unmanned, virtual reality flights :-) or at the very least, flying only when there is no convivial land transport option.
While some military investments trickle down into civilian technology (well, often not "civil", per se...), I wonder if this is a kind of trickle-up thing, and The They Corporation wants to use this tech to fly huge bombers long distances. In other words, indirect military budgeting.
Staying on the science fiction theme, 35 years ago the movie Airport '75 showed (taught) us how a justifiably crazed flight attendant could guide a jumbo jet with damaged controls through the Rocky Mountains, with no training, a bad radio connection and a joy stick. More recently, a group of better trained persons were said to have flown several normally-operating commercial airliners into high value targets in the eastern United States.
Image of Karen Black from Cinema de Merde
No comments:
Post a Comment