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rfugger | 6 years ago
Boeing deserves a 9-figure fine though, and its shareholders should lose massively to make sure this doesn't happen again.
rfugger | 6 years ago
Boeing deserves a 9-figure fine though, and its shareholders should lose massively to make sure this doesn't happen again.
mantap|6 years ago
rosege|6 years ago
snowwindwaves|6 years ago
tanakachen|6 years ago
The problem is that this is not actually a software problem. It’s an airplane design problem, and Boeing is trying to convince you that it’s just the software.
Even if the software is perfect, this plane remains a flying coffin until it is redesigned from scratch.
The only real fix is not to fly on this plane.
_Codemonkeyism|6 years ago
When doing root cause analysis there is a pyramid with people problems at the top, then deeper technical problems, process problems, culture problems and value problems.
Most root cause analysis stops with people problems, or technical problems while all the root cause analysis I've done never showed that problems end there. Culture and value have often been the underlying causes.
linuxftw|6 years ago
How can we trust that assessment? What if the plane is inherently unsafe? There's been no critical 3rd party review of the plane without MCAS in operation. Everything is a Boeing talking point. Their proposed fix is 2 AoA sensors (on top of whatever slapped-together software updates), and if they disagree, disable MCAS. That's going to decrease the MTBF of that system. So, IMO, the real question is, why should MCAS even be allowed if it's so easily disabled? Either the planes can fly without it or they can't.
objektif|6 years ago
unknown|6 years ago
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