ZDNet has an
article by
Charlie Osborne about new uses for new technology:
Microsoft's Surface Pro 3 tablet is now the gadget of choice for Lufthansa and Austrian Airlines' pilots. According to a post on Microsoft's official blog, pilots hired by both Lufthansa and Austrian Airlines will be equipped with the devices. Lufthansa has purchased more than five thousand Surface Pro 3 tablets, which will be rolled out to pilots worldwide in February and March of 2015. Austrian Airlines has already deployed 650 of the tablets, with another thousand expected to be issued by the end of the year.
Delta Airlines previously adopted the tablet range for its pilots in September of 2013, the airline provided eleven thousand pilots with Microsoft Surface 2 tablets, joining over nineteen thousand flight attendants who were issued Windows Phone-based smartphones.
Microsoft says that, as with Delta, Lufthansa and Austrian Airlines' devices will use flight-based apps built for the Windows 8.1 platform. Flight crews will have access to tools including weather reports, dynamic charts, and navigation utilities. The tablets also take the place of heavy flight bags, consolidating vast flight manuals, which can weigh up to fifteen kilos, into a digital format.
Dr. Philipp Haller, a B777 pilot at Austrian Airlines said:
Starting in the late 1990s with the arrival of the first laptops in the flight deck, the dream of a completely paperless cockpit is now actually becoming a reality, thanks to the Surface tablets from Microsoft. We have been using laptops for fifteen years to replace most of the paper on board, but they could not be used during takeoff and landing.
The Microsoft Surface Pro 3 is certified for Electronic Flight Bag (EFB) usage on commercial airlines by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) as well as the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA). By replacing bulky manuals with tablets, airlines can expect to save a fortune each year in fuel costs.
Cyril Belikoff, Microsoft's senior director of the Microsoft Surface project, commented:
We have been clear on Microsoft's commitment to Surface in business and, with this move adopting Surface in their cockpit, Lufthansa and Austrian Airlines join the growing number of commercial airlines using Surface Pro 3 to help give their pilots the best, most efficient, and productive in-flight experience.
In related news, Microsoft's Azure platform suffered an outage of nearly eleven hours this week. According to company officials, the storage service went down due to a Microsoft performance update; a storage loop occurred as the update rolled out.
Rico says yeah, but the
cool airlines (like
Virgin) will use
iPads... (And wait until the Germans get an eleven-hour outage; talk about pissed-off...)
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