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Transportation

Airlines Face Acute Pilot Shortage 421

Hugh Pickens writes "The WSJ reports that U.S. airlines are facing their most serious pilot shortage since the 1960s. Federal mandates are taking effect that will require all newly hired pilots to have at least 1,500 hours of prior flight experience — six times the current minimum. This raises the cost and time to train new fliers in an era when pay cuts and more-demanding schedules already have made the profession less attractive. Meanwhile, thousands of senior pilots at major airlines soon will start hitting the mandatory retirement age of 65. 'We are about four years from a solution, but we are only about six months away from a problem,' says Bob Reding, recently retired executive vice president of operations at AMR Corp. A study by the University of North Dakota's aviation department indicates major airlines will need to hire 60,000 pilots by 2025 to replace departures and cover expansion over the next eight years. Meanwhile, only 36,000 pilots have passed the Air Transport Pilot exam in the past eight years, which all pilots would have to pass under the Congressionally imposed rules, and there are limits to the ability of airlines, especially the regional carriers, to attract more pilots by raising wages. While the industry's health has improved in recent years, many carriers still operate on thin profit margins, with the airlines sandwiched between rising costs for fuel and unsteady demand from price-sensitive consumers. 'It certainly will result in challenges to maintain quality,' says John Marshall, an independent aviation-safety consultant who spent 26 years in the Air Force before overseeing Delta's safety. 'Regional carriers will be creative and have to take shortcuts' to fill their cockpits."

Comment Balance? (Score 0) 319

Don't you think it is only natural?
Since back then the most common connections to the internet was still on dial-up? So it's only natural for webpages today to scale and actually enhances the user's experience if the technology we have now is used correctly.

Comment As long as Tali is Safe (Score 0) 78

...I don't care about anything else =)

But seriously I'm glad that they didn't make this feature a requirement to get the "full story".

But if this new feature is anything like the overlord/shadowbroker(?) DLC where there's a car chase and not another shoot and cover then I think it will be an awesome co-op experience it might even deter people from pirating it.

Comment Movement (Score 0) 163

Is the movement suppose to feel that awkward?

To be honest when I first read the title "First Person Dungeon Crawlers" I thought about Hexen 2 but as I viewed the video made me realize that I haven't played any games like it and I have been gaming since 90s. I would have been glad to give this a try but the movement and how the game-play just feels weird to me.

Comment RIP (Score 0) 1613

I thought this was some sort of Joke at first but then I remembered it wasn't April 1st.... RIP Steve Jobs: February 24, 1955 - October 5, 2011

Comment RIP (Score 0) 1613

I thought it was some sort of prank at first but then I remembered it wasn't April 1st.... RIP Steve Jobs: February 24, 1955 - October 5, 2011
Microsoft

Was .NET All a Mistake? 688

mikejuk writes "The recent unsettling behavior at Microsoft concerning .NET makes it a good time to re-evaluate what the technology is all about. It may have been good technology, but with the systems guys building Windows preferring to stick with C++, the outcome was inevitable. Because they failed to support its way of doing things, .NET has always been a second-class Windows citizen unable to make direct use of the Windows APIs — especially the latest. .NET started out as Microsoft's best challenge to Java but now you have to ask: what has the excursion into managed code brought the Microsoft programmer, and indeed what good has it done Microsoft? From where we are now, it begins to look very much like an unnecessary forced detour, and Windows programmers are going to be living with the mess for years to come."

Comment vote with your money. (Score 0) 214

As I have read a dozen times here in /. vote with your wallet to make corporations like EA stops this sort of policy for their games. Old games didn't have this sort of issues and yet they sold a lot because they were really good , Besides if you really are into games or a "gamer" you would still buy the original even after playing/beating the game from a pirated version since you would get tons of free stuff nowadays that isn't included in a pirated game. To me that's the one edge of legal games over pirated one's

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