US FAA issues ground stop advisory for Alaska Airlines(reuters.com)
reuters.com
US FAA issues ground stop advisory for Alaska Airlines
https://www.reuters.com/business/aerospace-defense/us-faa-issues-ground-stop-advisory-alaska-airlines-2024-04-17/
11 comments
Anytime I see a ground stop due to a software update it always reminds me of when Delta's data center caught on fire
https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2016/08/data-....
https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2016/08/data-....
Didn’t this happen recently? And was also the weight and balance calculation bug?
I assumed software but couldn’t work out why that would have had a long hidden issue or suddenly started.
The issue was they upgraded the software and it went wrong somehow, and Alaska airlines requested the ground stop be issued. ie the FAA didn’t find something wrong, rather AA did (no obvious details - was the upgrade taking longer than expected or was the result going wrong somehow?). Anyway I assume there’s contract rules that make delaying due to a “ground stop” from the FAA better than just a 100% internally driven delay?
The issue was they upgraded the software and it went wrong somehow, and Alaska airlines requested the ground stop be issued. ie the FAA didn’t find something wrong, rather AA did (no obvious details - was the upgrade taking longer than expected or was the result going wrong somehow?). Anyway I assume there’s contract rules that make delaying due to a “ground stop” from the FAA better than just a 100% internally driven delay?
Looks like advisory was lifted after about an hour
[deleted]
siborg(1)
https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/faa-grounds-all-al... ("FAA grounds all Alaska Airlines flights nationwide because of computer issues")
- "The airline told CBS News Bay Area it experienced an issue while performing an upgrade to its system that calculates weight and balance, and a ground stop all Alaska and Horizon flights was instituted at about 7:50 a.m. PT."