Sounds like we may be getting close to boarding. Hope I don't end up sitting on the tarmac for hours.
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If you are sitting on the tarmac, you will be fine since the planes aren't moving. I would suggest sitting in the terminal versus the tarmac though, unless you are doing one of those outside boarding jobbers, which I always thought were weird.Sounds like we may be getting close to boarding. Hope I don't end up sitting on the tarmac for hours.
If you are sitting on the tarmac, you will be fine since the planes aren't moving. I would suggest sitting in the terminal versus the tarmac though, unless you are doing one of those outside boarding jobbers, which I always thought were weird.
Watch those steps though, they can be tricky.If it's good enough for the president of the United States, it's good enough for me.
Have they tried unplugging, waiting 60 seconds then plugging it back in?
Did the FORTRAN compiler take a **** on them this morning?
When coming back from the Cancun airport. We were something like 3 hours behind. Finally loaded and the pilot decided to announce that we were 9th in line and it takes 3-5 minutes for each to take off. I have never heard an entire plane groan in unison before, but I have now. Pilot would have been better keeping his mouth shut.
I heard it keeps getting delayed because the FORTRAN programmers keep dying of old age.The FORTRAN upgrade project was delayed until 2032.
Fortran 66 or Fortran 77?The FORTRAN upgrade project was delayed until 2032.
I laugh, but as a former FAA employee, I laugh because it’s dangerously close to the truth.The FORTRAN upgrade project was delayed until 2032.
Did the FORTRAN compiler take a **** on them this morning?
I heard it keeps getting delayed because the FORTRAN programmers keep dying of old age.
I hate being on the plane on the tarmac "jockeying".
It's like trying to get rebound position.
Yeah it's crazy to me how many essential systems still run on what's for all intents and purposes a dead language. When I was a freshman ME student 25 years ago we all had to take Fortran and the first day the professor said you'll never use this unless you go work in air traffic control or for Wall Street.The amount of important but ancient systems that run on essentially dead languages like FORTRAN in all sorts of important fields (transportation/logistics, banking, insurance, industrial controls, government, the military, etc.) scares me sometimes. Stuff like this is going to keep happening again and again.
Lotta public and private entities out there stuck sitting on those systems, unable to update or maintain them well and hoping they just keep working, and unable to bear the cost of completely redoing it on the fly into a more modern language/system that would be bumpy to implement but easier in the long run.