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-   -   Christmas Meltdown (https://www.airlinepilotforums.com/southwest/140960-christmas-meltdown.html)

JayAitch 12-28-2022 11:03 AM


Originally Posted by Palmtree Pilot (Post 3561095)
They can’t be bothered with low priority issues, when the DEI agenda is TOP priority for this goverment, thus corporate America.

Hahaha. Are you running for SWAPA MC perchance?

TFAYD 12-28-2022 11:14 AM


Originally Posted by FollowMe (Post 3561085)
The Sabre CT suite has been continually updated by new owner CAE and runs plenty of operations around the country (and world) with no carrier in it’s history coming anywhere close to the catastrophic loss of crew visibility that has beset WN.

Other existing CMS options that run airlines today, also without such catastrophic failures in their history:
AIMS
Lufthansa Systems
Jeppesen CTE

New CMS suites that have been developed in the past 5 years:
NavBlue CMS
ELP CMS
CAE Crew Manager


There are off the shelf solutions available in the market that could have been implemented at relatively low cost in a 12-24 month project plan at any point over the past half decade. The decision to NOT make a move should be as scrutinized as Ed spending hundreds of millions in capital on stock buybacks and pushing pilots with time left on the clock out the door during the worst labor contraction potentially in our industry’s history.

True - but all of them are nowhere near the level of innovation delivered by other enterprise business solutions.

I’d argue that most of them are not a great economic success but more of a “hobby job” done out of necessity - and typical catering to a few anchor customers only.

the market is simply to small with too much regulatory fragmentation to attract some real investors / developers.

FollowMe 12-28-2022 11:21 AM


Originally Posted by TFAYD (Post 3561117)
True - but all of them are nowhere near the level of innovation delivered by other enterprise business solutions.

I’d argue that most of them are not a great economic success but more of a “hobby job” done out of necessity - and typical catering to a few anchor customers only.

the market is simply to small with too much regulatory fragmentation to attract some real investors / developers.

So you’ve participated in RFI, RFP, and/or technical implementation of these systems and have specific knowledge of their direct programmatic complexities and capabilities? Can you provide examples of how any of the listed options would have NOT resulted in an improved recovery over the current solution?

at6d 12-28-2022 11:40 AM

I can offer one example—the epic fail of the Crew Buddy replacement. Here we had a SWA pilot that developed a 100% user friendly interface at a reasonable subscription rate. It had pretty much all the extras needed (including destination weather, hotel info etc.). Company was rumored to be in purchase talks and then backed out. They allegedly stole some tech (wasn’t copyrighted so whatever) and came out with a poor functioning app that is totally a sub-par product probably the summer project for an IT intern.

This is the mentality.

What about the weather meltdown from about a year ago where we couldn’t get a release because an Amazon cloud feature failed? Really?! We have no FAA weather backup?

Seriously? As a corporate pilot I had way more resources to get a flight out by myself.

TFAYD 12-28-2022 11:58 AM


Originally Posted by FollowMe (Post 3561121)
So you’ve participated in RFI, RFP, and/or technical implementation of these systems and have specific knowledge of their direct programmatic complexities and capabilities? Can you provide examples of how any of the listed options would have NOT resulted in an improved recovery over the current solution?

Any of the mentioned solutions would probably be better than the current process from what I understand it is (I am not at SWA)

My point was that aviation IT solutions are notoriously legacy oriented while also requiring tons of customization (meaning big $$$$). I can only assume that this is a contributing factor that SWA did not implement anything yet. But I suppose that will change.

RJSAviator76 12-28-2022 12:29 PM


Originally Posted by KelvinHelmholtz (Post 3560518)
Think beyond the capitalist and communist dichotomy… what OOfff said is just objectively correct. Neoliberal capitalism leads to degenerative corporate culture since the only thing that matters at the end of the day is making a profit for shareholders. Communism sucks but being ruled by international finance capital and WEF affiliated groups isn’t much better

Holy Christ... you don't and may you never know what you're talking about.

This level of ignorance can only be cured by speaking with people who fled communism. You clearly have NO idea what communism is, let alone living under it. Whack and I do because we both lived under it.

For Pete's sakes... please, PLEASE pick up a book and talk to someone who's lived under both systems. Or.... are you perhaps one of those who thinks "it'll be different here"?

cessnapilot 12-28-2022 12:34 PM

What’s going on?
 
I never like it when people rubberneck past an accident on the freeway, but here I am… in the southwest forum! I will say I have the southwest credit card and you’re my first choice on my patterns that have a commercial ticket.

I see some comments by pilots thinking about options at other airlines, and I thought I would tread into these risky waters! I was at Northwest and I experienced a strike, 2 IT melt downs, bankruptcy, etc. There was a snow storm in Detroit dumping a lot of snow and the airport was totally overloaded. Dispatch just kept sending the planes. People stranded on the aircraft for 9 hours les to new laws and a class action lawsuit costing $7 million in the year 2000.

in any case, I thought I’d sharp shoot the system… so I went to the cargo side after 10 years with Northwest. Then came age 65 retirement, parking 3 man planes, global financial crisis… so the 5 year upgrade at cargo turned into 12 years. Had I stayed at Northwest… quicker upgrades and more seniority at Delta. I’d retire in the top 100 I think.

I have completely enjoyed my career. I have liked aspects of every carrier I’ve worked for, but it’s torture when you’re not given the tools to do your job or you’re not treated like a valuable assest. Pilots are nothing but a cost item, and we’re treated more like a horse hitched to a carriage. Unbridled capitalism has left little value to intangibles such as happy employees and investing in an item that doesn’t justify itself immediately. Wall Street runs things… sorry for the tangent…

sooooo… I guess what I wanted to share is that the magic eight ball works as well as anything in the airline industry. You won’t know until the end of your career if you made the right choices. When you make your choices, don’t look back. Nobody want to hear “I could have been a Captain at xyz.” As bad as you feel today, you will feel a lot different in a year. All airlines have happy employees when planes are coming, upgrades are happening, and there is a raise. We feel horrible when there are planes parked, furloughed, and bankruptcies. Good luck with your choices. There really are no wrong choices. I think this will force Southwest to upgrade systems to something like the 1990s! I enjoy riding on you guys, so hold the course… and BTW… if you want to feel better, I don’t recommend reading twitter comments or reading statements by your CEO.

I bought a Southwest ticket for my 15 year old son from SLC coming back from skiing with a friend. It’s not until 3 days, so I hope you guys get it together!

SonicFlyer 12-28-2022 01:37 PM


Originally Posted by arbalist1 (Post 3561052)
But I'd rather be working at SWA during an epic meltdown than an AA epic meltdown. I feel less likely to get punched in the face in the terminal.

This comment led me to daydream about what a meltdown at Spirit would look like ha ha ha ha

FollowMe 12-28-2022 01:49 PM


Originally Posted by at6d (Post 3561139)
I can offer one example—the epic fail of the Crew Buddy replacement. Here we had a SWA pilot that developed a 100% user friendly interface at a reasonable subscription rate. It had pretty much all the extras needed (including destination weather, hotel info etc.). Company was rumored to be in purchase talks and then backed out. They allegedly stole some tech (wasn’t copyrighted so whatever) and came out with a poor functioning app that is totally a sub-par product probably the summer project for an IT intern.

This is the mentality.

What about the weather meltdown from about a year ago where we couldn’t get a release because an Amazon cloud feature failed? Really?! We have no FAA weather backup?

Seriously? As a corporate pilot I had way more resources to get a flight out by myself.

This is a fair take on why SWA management failed to implement a solution that could have prevented this, but not an example of the available solutions lacking the automation capability to not lose thousands of pilots. In fairness, what you identify is far more important, the root of the issue if you will.

hercretired 12-28-2022 01:59 PM


Originally Posted by SonicFlyer (Post 3561214)
This comment led me to daydream about what a meltdown at Spirit would look like ha ha ha ha

actually I think the SW situation had to do with its size, and still using old IT. Spirit, Frontier, etc may not be big enough (yet) to suffer this. SW has ???? 750 airplanes


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