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Comment Re:Time for Boeing Bashing! (Score 5, Insightful) 140

I used to work maintaining aircraft - both heavy maintenance and fixing snags - before moving over to pushing papers around.

Oh for Pete's sake, this is ridiculous.

FOD in the fuel tanks is not a serious problem and happens a LOT given how they are sealed and what it takes to actually work inside them. Then there are the thousands of pounds of fuel that flow through them that can often carries junk too. There are fuel filters, screens and all kinds of protections in place.

No. It isn't ridiculous - not if you want to maintain safety in the air and scheduled flights. What happens if a boot cover - for example - wraps itself around an intake filter and blocks it? If the fuel system in the Boeings are made on the same principles that the fuel systems I've worked with, that means the system will detect a blockage (pressure drop) and open a bypass valve - the assumption being that unfiltered fuel is better for the engine than no fuel, especially when airborne. Which in the case of large debris means that foreign objects can and will get into the fuel pumps, engine fuel controllers and so on... might not kill the engine outright, but will generate extra maintenance, costs and delays. So FOD in the fuel is a serious matter.

And even if the protections built into the system works 100%, why would you accept eating up your safety margins? Do you neglect using the seat belt in your car since you have air-bags?

FOD is nearly unavoidable and extremely hard to control completely. I'm not saying we shouldn't do better, or that Boeing shouldn't be trying harder to train their workforce and reduce the problem, I'm just saying that finding stuff in fuel tanks, where sealant is regularly scraped off and new materials blobbed on by people working in dark, cramped, awkward and dangerous conditions dressed in hazmat suits isn't a huge hairy deal.

We counted every single tool out of and into the toolbox. We signed things like disposable gloves and boot covers in and out. If we were scraping sealant, we had to present our supervisor with a bag of scrapings, and if he though it was less than it should be he went in to check for loose scrapings himself. Yes, it is dark, cramped and uncomfortable - but that isn't an excuse to do a substandard job.

If anything were missing - be it half a glove, a 3' torque-meter, or anything in between, we stopped work and found it - if necessary opening up hatches and panels that were already signed off and closed. The aircraft didn't leave the maintenance hangar until all tools and equipment were accounted for.

Bashing Boeing for this is crazy talk by folks who don't know anything about the problem or the conditions which Boeing struggles under to control the problem. But I guess, Boeing is the big bad corporate satan, always going for profits over safety, never really caring about their reputation or doing the job right for some of you.

So we are off to the races, bashing the company as bad, when in reality you are really bad mouthing the poor guys and gals who have to don the protection suits, crawl through barely large enough access holes to wiggle their way through a maze dragging a bag of tools and supplies, lying in jet fuel, barely able to see, trying to not pinch off their air supply so they can reach the place where they scrape off the existing blobs of sealant, hopefully recovering all the scraps. Then they blob on new sealant, making sure to get enough on to fix the problems. Then try to reverse the process of getting in, dragging everything they brought in, plus the sealant scraps they scraped off back out.

Yea these folks need to be more careful, but I dare you to try it yourself. It's an extremely difficult job they do, so cut them a bit of slack.

No, people are bashing on Boeing for letting their corporate culture deteriorate to the point where the people who are doing the difficult job - and I've been there - either don't care enough to call a halt when tools and equipment are missing, or don't dare to speak up. Once the main focus becomes getting the airframes of the assembly line and not doing the job right, quality and pride of workmanship deteriorates. The failure is not on the workers; but on their overseers, inspectors, management and bean counters - and this sort of failure can potentially kill a lot of people.

Comment Everybody Is Against 'Gun Violence'! (Score 2, Insightful) 497

It's over "Gun Control" where the reasonable debate happens.

The Left, ever the great manipulators of language, realized they had lost traction advocating "Gun Control," and are now rolling with "Gun Violence" as their fallback position.

The words have changed, but their loathing of the 2nd Amendment remains intact and unwavering.

Comment Re:Corrected headline (Score 5, Insightful) 328

The programmer trains the AI to see the N-word as hate speech. Fair enough. Then the AI reads the so-called "black twitter" where everyone refers to everyone else as the N-word, and the AI tracks it all as hate speech. Also fair, it's a goddam computer, not a socio-linguist. Ditto the Q-word for the so-called "LGBTQ twitter." Fair, and fair.

Hysterical. But fair.

United States

Foxconn Will Only Create 1500 Jobs, says Wisconsin Governor (theverge.com) 203

The Foxconn factory in Wisconsin will only create 1,500 jobs when it starts production next May, Gov. Tony Evers said yesterday. From a report: That's the same number Foxconn has been saying since it shifted plans for the factory a few months ago, and far short of the 13,000 jobs that were promised when President Trump broke ground a year ago. Evers has been negotiating with Foxconn since he replaced former Wisconsin governor Scott Walker, and he says he now has "clarity: on Foxconn's plans. 1,500 jobs is short of the 1,800 jobs required for Foxconn to get the next set of tax credits under its $4 billion deal with the state. Foxconn already missed its first jobs target under that contract, hiring only 156 employees instead of the required 260 last year. Instead, Foxconn has bought a series of empty buildings for "innovation centers" around the state as part of a promised "AI 8K+5G ecosystem" (although it's never specified what that ecosystem actually is). Timeline: Wisconsin's $4.1 Billion Foxconn Boondoggle; Foxconn Is Reconsidering Plan For Wisconsin Factory; Foxconn Says It Will Build Wisconsin Factory After All; Foxconn is Confusing the Hell Out of Wisconsin; and One Year After Trump's Foxconn Groundbreaking, There is Almost Nothing To Show For It.
Medicine

44 US States Still Allow 'Religious Exemptions' For Vaccines (pewresearch.org) 426

An anonymous reader quotes the Pew Research Center: New York recently became the fifth state -- after California, Maine, Mississippi and West Virginia -- to enact a law requiring children in public school to be vaccinated unless they have a valid medical reason. Legislatures in several other states are considering similar legislation. Most states (44), however, allow children to be exempt from vaccinations due to religious concerns, according to a Pew Research Center analysis. And one state, Minnesota, allows for a broader exemption based on personal beliefs but does not explicitly mention religion... Among the states that specifically allow religious exemptions to vaccinations, 15 also allow exemptions for any type of nonreligious personal belief, according to the Center's analysis...

The action in New York came after the state became the center of a nationwide measles outbreak that has sickened more than 1,000 Americans in 28 states so far this year.

Comment Re:BigTech Censorship (Score 1) 743

Report the messages. Chances are the moderators of those subs actually remove those messages, as opposed to what happened in T_D where the moderators left messages which violated T_D's own rules up.

T_D wasn't quarantined because of what people post (as every sub has people posting violence and nonsense from time to time) - the problem was the moderators weren't moderating it.

Comment Re:BigTech Censorship (Score 0) 743

The problem was the moderators weren't removing posts which violated Reddit's rules and their own subreddit's rules. If a subreddit has poor moderation and is home to threats against people which aren't removed, the subreddit gets quarantined until the moderators show they're actually willing and able to moderate it. This goes for any sub, left or right.

And a subreddit called "fuck the police" is fine unless it contains posts urging people to go out and kill police officers, as happened in T_D, and especially if those messages aren't removed by the moderators.

Comment Re:A bigger mistake than the Brexit referendum? (Score 1) 808

So it's undemocratic to ask the people what they want? If they still believe the same as before, then nothing will change. If they have changed their minds, it's undemocratic to ignore them now. And it's impossible to ask the same question twice in a referendum, so it can't possibly be re-running it.

Security

In a First, Israel Responds To Hamas Hackers With an Air Strike (zdnet.com) 568

For the first time, Israel has used brute military force to respond to a Hamas cyberattack, three years after NATO proclaimed "cyber" an official battlefield in modern warfare. From a report: The "bomb-back" response took place on Saturday when Israel Defense Forces (IDF) launched an air strike against a building in the Gaza Strip. They claimed it housed Hamas cyber operatives, which had been engaging in a cyberattack against Israel's "cyberspace." "We were ahead of them all the time," said Brigadier General D., the head of the IDF's cyber defense division. "The moment they tried to do something, they failed." Israeli officials did not disclose any details about the Hamas cyberattack; however, they said they first stopped the attack online, and only then responded with an air strike. "After dealing with the cyber dimension, the Air Force dealt with it in the physical dimension," said IDF spokesperson, Brig. Gen. Ronen Manlis. "At this point in time, Hamas has no cyber operational capabilities."

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