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FAA Awards NextGen Contract to Lockheed Martin
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has awarded a contract to Lockheed Martin worth $344 million to develop and implement a new NextGen technology that will improve the efficiency of departures and arrivals, as well as the movement of aircraft on the ground. Terminal Flight Data Manager (TFDM) will replace the paper flight strips that air traffic controllers currently use at most airports to share flight plans with electronic flight strips that will enable faster and more informed tactical… (www.faa.gov) More...Sort type: [Top] [Newest]
Having worked for Northrop Grumman, I'm not looking forward to LockMart getting this contract. They have a history of being late and over budget.Would have loved to see my NG buddies get the contract and fulfill it on time and under budget.
If history is any guide this will turn into a multi-billion dollar boondoggle. It is time to break up the aerospace industry and restore real competition.
Agree with Guerry Bowen 100%. Said leader should order to first define an optimized business process that could be measured over what exists today. Then, and only then, they should look at how automation could help improve that optimization even more. Typical method is to collect requirements from a large group, and then collect some more in the middle and at the end of the automation building effort.
am a 28 yr 10 mo. atc and 21 year and now retired pilot of citations and falcons. the problems in faa atc is management. they only want to protect their retirement and don't want to make waves in suggestions fron the WORKERS. good luck LM
As a career Army officer and having been very reluctantly reassigned to fill some of the most bureaucratic positions, I have discovered one salient aspect regarding automation upgrading. It has never made anyone’s job more efficient and time saving. It has always resulted in heaping more useless tasks upon people and has increased the amount of primordial ooze seeping from under the doors of the most useless organizations imaginable.
I have only seen very few problem resolved by automation. I have seen a lot of problems resolved by assigning a leader to an organization who runs through it with a sharp knife to carve out the useless personnel and processes to make it more efficient. Then, an efficient operation might be helped by automation.
Good luck to the FAA, Lockheed, and the US tax payer lifting the bill.
I have only seen very few problem resolved by automation. I have seen a lot of problems resolved by assigning a leader to an organization who runs through it with a sharp knife to carve out the useless personnel and processes to make it more efficient. Then, an efficient operation might be helped by automation.
Good luck to the FAA, Lockheed, and the US tax payer lifting the bill.
As a career Information Technology professional, if that's the kind of results you're seeing, the development and implementation cycle of the software/hardware is not being properly managed. There also needs to be a change management effort so that everyone transitioning from old processes to new automated processes knows how to react to improved data delivery. I'm not saying that Lockheed will provide anything better, but don't blame the automation - blame the people who have created it.