News

This week's NOTAM system failure, which caused thousands of flight delays and cancelations, has airline industry leaders calling for more stable funding to upgrade antiquated FAA systems.
The Federal Aviation Administration explained that the Jan 11 grounding of aircraft was caused by unintentionally deleted computer files.
Belgian photographer Thomas Nolf documents our obsession with aviation through his colourful and comical work and asks; what fuels these flights of fancy?
HAMBURG—Diehl Aviation is introducing eDecor, an electronic wallpaper designed to change instantly the look of an interior, thus offering new possibilities in branding and cabin atmosphere. The ...
In January, thousands of flights were canceled or delayed following an outage to an FAA system used to distribute alerts to pilots.
An air traffic control computer issue caused hundreds of delays at Florida airports on Monday, the Federal Aviation Association said, disrupting flights during one of the busiest travel days in ...
The Federal Aviation Administration software that failed Wednesday causing thousands of flight delays and cancellations is 30 years old and at least six years away from being updated, a government ...
More than 500 flights at O’Hare International Airport and Midway Airport were delayed Wednesday morning because of a computer outage at the Federal Aviation Administration that brought flights ...
American Airlines grounded all of its U.S. flights for about an hour Tuesday morning after a glitch with its flight operations system, leading to widespread flight delays.
Hackers associated with Scattered Spider tactics have expanded their targeting to the aviation and transportation industries after previously attacking insurance and ...
The breakdown of a key computer system, which resulted in the suspension of U.S. flight departures on Wednesday, is not the first such issue to hinder Federal Aviation Administration (FAA ...
FAA meltdown is Buttigieg's next political headache The computer failure's cause remains unknown, though the FAA and White House have said there's no evidence of a cyberattack.