
A New Twist On Skywriting 149
Nugget writes "The advent of Internet-based flight tracking technology enables an entirely new kind of skywriting. Gulfstream Aerospace sent up one of their $50M business jets today on an 8.5-hour test flight spanning 11 states for the sole purpose of leaving their mark on the Net in the form of a flight track that spells out 'GV' (the nickname of the Gulfstream V aircraft being flown) when viewed online."
Someone (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Someone (Score:5, Funny)
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Perhaps you have taken it upon yourself to alert others to this important cause?
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What a disgusting waste of fuel (Score:5, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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Wish I could google a link, maybe someone else will have better luck.
her book? or his movie? (Score:3, Funny)
http://209.85.165.104/search?q=cache:HB_qxPVZ4AsJ: underthenews.blogspot.com/2006_08_01_archive.html+ snopes+ecolo [209.85.165.104]
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Re:What a disgusting waste of fuel (Score:4, Funny)
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Like you? I mean literally. You are unlikely to make a difference right? Who ever you are. So why bother right? One More SUV is hardly going to kill the planet. Not switching you crap off before going to bed - Buying your power from a company useing or investing heavily in renewables... None of it is going to make a noticable change right?
Fuck whit.
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Global warming won't hurt us, it'll hurt our children.
I don't have children, and I hate your children.
I get to drive an big, comfortable SUV and I know it's hurting those screaming annoying fat little children you lot seem to care so much about. Really it's win-win.
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NYC to Denver: 1629 miles -- http://www.angelfire.com/md2/timewarp/cursortrail. html [angelfire.com]
"4508 09322 GEP DPR RECAP MLS LWT BZN DBS FFU HVE RSK ALS PUB DVV RLG DVV PUB TBE LAA SNY RAP LBF ANY OVR HARPI" -- well I don't know how many miles that is. Cheers,
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That route is 3871.5 nautical miles according to DUATS.
Re:What a disgusting waste of fuel (Score:4, Insightful)
In today's age, a better question is whether it's really necessary to go to Denver. There's still a lot of unneeded business travel going on, when voice- or video-conference would work just as well.
(** quite possibly the worst, non-SI unit of measure I've ever used)
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If you'd like to visit to ski, then you're okay. We like your money.
If you're going to move here, get rid of the BMW and learn to drive in the damn snow.
Disclaimer: I work for a company that builds conferencing equipment and I live in Denver.)
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Re:What a disgusting waste of fuel (Score:5, Insightful)
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I live in Britain, and we're not the best, but we're about twice as efficient per capita as the US and we're one of the few countries on course to meet it's Kyoto targets.
And I do personally try to make a difference. I've fitted low energy light bulbs to about 3/4 of the lights, I've got ro
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No, the problem is not CO2 production. Breathing and dying only release CO2 which was extracted from the atmosphere very recently. That kind of CO2 production is cyclic and averages out to nothing in a short (in planetary terms) period. It's CO2 production from sources which have been locked up in the Earth's crust for hundreds of millions of years and the resultant net increase in CO2 which is the prob
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Yes, all of which they would have done anyway. If you would care to calculate the incremental fuel cost of transporting a DVD (I don't) I'm sure you would find it's less than driving to the movies. Far less. Your argument is like saying don't take the bus because buses burn more fuel than cars. The bus is running anyway, so if you're on it r
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You're making a big leap there. Even if I think you shouldn't be flying your GV, that doesn't mean I think you should be prevented from doing so. I don't approve of people getting a Suburban to drive their only child to school, but that doesn't mean I think it should be banned. Of course there are plenty of people who DO think the things they disapprove
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"Black and white thinking" - seeing the world only in terms of extremes - is a sign of mental illness. If you are honestly incapable of seeing that producing, say, ten tons of CO2 from fossil fuels is worse then producing one ton of CO2 from fossil fuels I suggest you go and see a psychiastrist.
Howe
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And what the fuck do you call your 'holier-than-thou' rant about lightbulbs ? that's pretty destructive, not to mention all your comments are assumptions. Maybe he's a CFL-using, subway riding citizen like myself.
His point was probably more about taking personal responsibility for actions, like 'you should probably focus more on your own personal consumption instead
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I have to commute to my job, but according to you that's not life or death.
Have to eat and pay the mortgage and support my son. Sorry.
I use a Prius and drive as little as possible, but unless you are a full-time tele-commuter, CO2 will be produced. I'll buy an electric car when the price goes down and the range incre
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I would starve to death before Netflix delivered the movie to me. If it is in the theaters, how long is the wait for Netflix to deliver it? At least a few months for the DVD to be released would be a prerequisite. Even if I didn't hold my breath waiting for the delivery, I'd exhale more CO2 in the months waiting for the delivery than
They were probably going to fly anyway. (Score:5, Insightful)
Calm down a little before you flip out, next time.
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Well, yes and no -- though the CO2 produced is a problem, it's been shown tha global dimming due to jet contrails has had an ameliatory effect. Note that in the days when the US air fleet was gorunded after 9/11, average ground temperature increased by three degrees -- and the consensus is that only the lack of jet contrails could have caused that temperature increase.
It's quite likely that we'll need to add extra contrails on purpose
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http://blogs.knoxnews.com/knx/silence/archives/20
Re:What a tiny insignificant amount of fuel (Score:2)
So... (Score:5, Funny)
... are we looking at a new type of spam?
Can't wait to read "Enlarge your peanus" right above some skyscraper...
I didn't notice (Score:1, Insightful)
what to sell... (Score:3, Funny)
-Sj53
Hmmmmmm (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Hmmmmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Hmmmmmm (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hmmmmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh, and the equipment that you've got on your aircraft.
And the time of day (in some circumstances)
And the day of the week(in other circumstances)
And the fact that Air traffic control needs to know where you're planning on flying.
Europe is even more difficult to fly in based on all of the restrictions that they put against the flight paths attempting to adjust the air traffic flow.
Oh, or were you basing the comment on the tiny non-jets(piston/turboprop) that can't fly very high.
(speaking as someone who's attempting to manage this data for commercial flight planning purposes)
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Air traffic control doesn't need to know a thing, so long as you stay out of their controlled airspace. If you ask for radar following, the only thing needed is a transponder ident.
Any licensed pilot can fly anytime they want, wherever they want (restricted airspace the exception of course). Without ever telling *anybody* *anything*
Re:Hmmmmmm (Score:4, Informative)
While your point in general is correct about VFR flight, this guy was cruising at FL400 - Class A airspace [fiu.edu].
He would definitely had to have an IFR plan on file, otherwise he'd get a message from the tower to call a phone number when he landed... and that would be the end of his days as a pilot. That's assuming he didn't have a fighter come along to say hello beforehand.
I would have liked to hear DEN Center asking wtf they were up to when it came time for that little loopy bit and back-track for the bottom of the "G"
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Although it's been a while ago, I remeber one of usual sayings like: If you're not faster then the Falcon or smaller then a kite, you better do as we like.
Though mostly my navy buddy answered with: "Can you handle 130Kg of metal flying pinpointed towards you at mach 3? No? Thought so!"
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Not Necessarily... (Score:2)
Anal? Yes, but not as bad as the guys at your local FSDO...
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I don't own my own plane, but I am in a club that owns a Warrior and 182. I put about 150-170 hours per year on the 182. The club is considering selling the 182 and buying a Diamond or Cirrus. If they do I just might make an offer on the Skylane.
The only drawback to being in the club is that people get upset if you take the plane for more than
Re:Hmmmmmm (Score:5, Informative)
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and I thought... (Score:3, Insightful)
I guess they found a way to trump stupid
Re:and I thought... (Score:4, Insightful)
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They missed a V (Score:5, Funny)
The first thing I thought of (Score:1)
Now THAT would be cool
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It may be as popular as (Score:1)
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My only thoughts are (Score:2, Funny)
Howlong befor a wealthy geek writes All You Base Are Belong to Us?
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Or worse, Bill Gates pays to have the message "Please upgrade to Vista" spelt out in this manner, 24/7
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Re:My only thoughts are (Score:4, Funny)
Etch-a-sketch (Score:5, Insightful)
one way to make money out of testing... (Score:5, Informative)
Horizon to horizon (Score:2)
It would have looked better (Score:1)
Cool but expensive (Score:1)
Leaving a comment on
And with more visibility becasuse
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Leaving a comment on
And with more visibility becasuse
Maybe, but I think the demographics are slightly different. That, or maybe I'm the only one on Slashdot that can't afford a private jet
Me (Score:1)
I was the pilot for this flight, and it was a shakedown flight.
But.
The GV displayed in the flight path is purely coincidental.
Truth is, I was lost.
Failed marketing (Score:2)
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Imagine what the poor guy who just found out his secretary is pregnant thought when he muttered "god, give me a sign" right before he looked into the air & saw it.
Surely (Score:1)
Ugly font (Score:5, Funny)
With a size of 3 billion points, breaking an earlier record [gpsdrawing.com], couldn't they have afforded a slightly more sophisticated typeface, such as Courier?
My browser (Firefox) doesn't go beyond 72 points. Is there a skywriting plugin available somewhere?
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I don't get it... (Score:1)
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Dig further. It includes the GPS logs including ground speed, altitude, lat and lon recorded every couple minutes. You can tell when they hit the jetstream (or maybe the throtle) as level flight went from around 300 knots to 500.
Ob Futurama (Score:5, Funny)
Fry: "Well sure, but not in our dreams. Only on TV and radio, and in magazines, and movies, and at ball games... and on buses and milk cartons and t-shirts, and bananas and written on the sky. But not in dreams, no sir."
11 states? (Score:2)
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According to Garfield, Wyoming is an Indian word for "nobody lives here"
Reminds me of this guy (Score:2)
If you ever feel the urge to imitate any of these people, try signing your name by pissing in the snow instead.
That is more impressive and demonstrates more skill.
Now that is just silly (Score:1)
Airvertising? (Score:1)
How about google earth adverts! (Score:1)
Very Ms GVUS (Score:2)
Lookup in the Sky (Score:2)
But who cares about the stupid skywriting stunt? That flightpath page is supercool. How do I find the specific flight number of a commercial flight I took, to look at my actual flightpath, witho
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For instance, DAL1237 (or DL1237) will give you Delta flight 1237 from Atlanta (ATL) to Orlando (MCO)
A quick and dirty lookup is at this website [airtimetable.com], although you can find 'em all over the place
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Hey, aviation has geeks too! (Score:2)
It's kind of the same situation if you had someone outside of the tech community look at a review for a bright and shiny $5,000 PC. We all know it's excessive, expensive, and something a non-tech will hardly understand