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The Federal Aviation Administration is seeking contractors to modernize its decades-old computer systems within four years.
If you are planning a flight to the USA in the near future, you should know this: Without Windows 95 and floppy discs, many ...
A new bill supports air traffic control recruitment and retention efforts and mental health services for controllers. Here's ...
The FAA is set to overhaul its ancient air traffic control systems that still uses a combination of Windows 95, floppy disks, ...
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), as reported by NPR, is looking to ditch the ancient technology of floppy disks and ...
"The whole idea is to replace the system. No more floppy disks or paper strips," Rocheleau said during the committee hearing. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy called the project "the most ...
According to the acting head of the FAA, air traffic control will also stop using paper printouts and Windows 95.
The fragile state of the U.S. air traffic control system was easy to see during the recent outages in Newark. But it will be ...
Not to worry nervous flyers, FAA vows to banish archaic systems... in a few years The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) ...
Legacy aircraft like the Boeing 747-400 still rely on floppy disks to update critical navigation data, due to costly and complex certification requirements for ...
In brief: It's 2025, and the FAA has decided it's time to stop using floppy disks and Windows 95 for air traffic control. The head of the agency, Chris Rocheleau, wants to replace the archaic ...
The acting FAA administrator laid out a plan to the House Appropriations Committee to launch a comprehensive upgrade of the ...