bigblue_dl
Armed
I know we have a few people around here that have some decent knowledge on commercial aviation and the planes themselves, so I wanted to ask this year. This is in response to the presumed crash of the Malaysian Air flight.
After one of these incidents happen, there is always the search for "the black box" so they can hopefully figure out what caused the crash. My question is, in 2014, how do we not have the technology to instantaneously upload this datalog to a satellite, instead of storing it in some kind of drive on the plane itself? With all of the technology we have, this has to be a possible, is there a reason why they haven't switched to this strategy? It seems like it could be pretty dang helpful in trying to find the plane if a datalog was uploaded in real time.
After one of these incidents happen, there is always the search for "the black box" so they can hopefully figure out what caused the crash. My question is, in 2014, how do we not have the technology to instantaneously upload this datalog to a satellite, instead of storing it in some kind of drive on the plane itself? With all of the technology we have, this has to be a possible, is there a reason why they haven't switched to this strategy? It seems like it could be pretty dang helpful in trying to find the plane if a datalog was uploaded in real time.