Save your pennies (aka what will you do after your job is automated)

How many times a trip do you have to intervene with automation? Next time you notice the automation is screwing up, just sit there and relax. Just let it happen because hell, in five years you're out of a job anyway!
Yeah, having LNAV and VNAV forget how to... nav on an approach in the mountains at night is fun. "This is me.. click click"
 
How many times a trip do you have to intervene with automation? Next time you notice the automation is screwing up, just sit there and relax. Just let it happen because hell, in five years you're out of a job anyway!
It's pretty rare and the few times I have to it's probably because I screwed up first.

I routinely marvel at how amazing it is you can depart one coast and arrive at the other five hours later without touching a single thing except the autopilot button, gear/flaps, and thrust lever movement to the "climb" detent.

The Airbus had an issue with a sudden climb when trying to descend but they fixed that not too long ago. Had something to do with temps up at altitude.
 
You've seen a 737 overhead panel right? If Boeing can't automate a bleed valve I don't think we'll see humans removed from the equation for 200 years.

It's automated. In AUTO, the isolation valve is open if any bleed or pack switch is off, or closed if not. :D
 
Pretty much no job is immune anymore and it's a far bigger issue outside of our career.

Yes, we are fortunate that even if automated or single-pilot airliners become feasible, regulation will buy us some time.

There are other jobs that are at risk of being automated away sooner. In fact studies have suggested that 47% of today's jobs are at risk of disappearing in the next 25 years. If there is 47% unemployment, the economy certainly won't support many pilots, and this always seems to be ignored when we have these discussions. Air travel is a luxury and if you work for an airline your livelihood is largely dependant on most of society having enough disposable income to afford it.
 
Not only that, but if this was 5-10 years down the road. Why would Boeing be dropping $20 bil, on the R&D and production of a new plane, the 797?? Which its controls will be manipulated by people. Also, Airbus would be in the red, with their shiny new A350. 5-10 yrs. Nope. 30-50 years away, yes.
You have to add on the obligatory half-century during which Boeing will make longer and longer versions of the same thing while changing everything except for the stuff that matters.

I predict that in 2042, the 797-MAXXX20UBER will be announced. It will be flown by two pilots, and carry 400 passengers sedated in stacked bunks. Orders will roll in because the CASM will be almost nothing.
 
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