News

Serveal notable industries and organizations still use floppy disks, including the U.S. FAA and San Francisco's Muni Metro ...
The FAA isn't alone in clinging to floppy disk technology. San Francisco's train control system still runs on DOS loaded from ...
The acting FAA administrator laid out a plan to the House Appropriations Committee to launch a comprehensive upgrade of the ...
America's air traffic control network runs on decades-old technology, and the acting FAA director wants to replace the whole ...
Just one moment, my traffic controller needs to swap out their floppy disk… there we go." Those are disquieting words you ...
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has confirmed that the US air traffic control system still runs on somewhat ...
According to the acting head of the FAA, air traffic control will also stop using paper printouts and Windows 95.
Air traffic controllers also still use slips of paper containing flight numbers to help track the approximately 45,000 ...
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is finally pulling the plug on its outdated air traffic control systems. How ...
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) relies on a lot of old technology to keep its air traffic control systems up and ...
Floppy disks aren’t storing flight movies or snack menus. They’re primarily used to update navigation databases—the internal maps and routing info inside an aircraft’s Flight Management ...
"No more floppy disks or paper strips." It's a goal that has eluded all ... This week, the FAA put out a Request For ...