Despite delays at some airports caused by staff shortages, government officials and aviation experts say flying is safe.
What the shutdown has done is amplify what is already broken in the air traffic control system, and what air traffic controllers must work with each day.
Abstract: The Reentrant Flexible Flow Shop Scheduling Problem (RFFSP) involves multiple repetitions of job processing in the production system, which leads to higher scheduling complexity. To solve ...
A QUT study has identified key design features that would make autonomous vehicles (AVs) more accessible for people with ...
As the investigation continues into Saturday’s helicopter crash that injured five people in Huntington Beach, a retired helicopter pilot believes the problem likely originated with the aircraft’s ...
A canonical problem in computer science is to find the shortest route to every point in a network. A new approach beats the ...
Travelers within the U.S. could experience flight delays as weather problems, air traffic controller shortages persist.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy says he understands the frustrations and worries of air traffic controllers who have to work without a paycheck during the government shutdown, but he and the union ...
At the Forbes BLK Summit in Atlanta, Georgia, Josh Aviv, founder and CEO of Spark Charge, and Sondra Sutton Phung, General ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results