The solution to pilot shortage?

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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by Old fella »

5x5 wrote:As with all progress, when things change new opportunities arise. Humans have proven to be very poor at predicting what the the new opportunities will be but very good at hand-wringing and bemoaning the loss of what is/was. Certainly the job of piloting aircraft will evolve but I'm willing to bet that none of us can predict how it actually turns out.

The best approach is to keep attuned to the changes that are happening and be open to new ideas and procedures. It requires reading in more depth than facebook posts, Tweets, 6 paragraph tabloid stories (or whatever the social media tool du jour is). And after reading there needs to be some reflexion on what has been read to tie it into the overall change that is happening.

Best of luck to us all in this endeavour!
Couldn't have said it any better myself. Time goes hand in hand with technology advances wherever that takes us 100...200....300 plus years from now.
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phillyfan
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by phillyfan »

Thank God for that. I have not seen many employees I would want flying airplanes with hundreds of people on-board over the past decade. There were some in the decade or two before that but not many these days.
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timel
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by timel »

Just for fun.

https://arxiv.org/abs/1707.08945
Deep neural network-based classifiers are known to be vulnerable to adversarial examples that can fool them into misclassifying their input through the addition of small-magnitude perturbations. However, recent studies have demonstrated that such adversarial examples are not very effective in the physical world--they either completely fail to cause misclassification or only work in restricted cases where a relatively complex image is perturbed and printed on paper. In this paper we propose a new attack algorithm--Robust Physical Perturbations (RP2)-- that generates perturbations by taking images under different conditions into account. Our algorithm can create spatially-constrained perturbations that mimic vandalism or art to reduce the likelihood of detection by a casual observer. We show that adversarial examples generated by RP2 achieve high success rates under various conditions for real road sign recognition by using an evaluation methodology that captures physical world conditions. We physically realized and evaluated two attacks, one that causes a Stop sign to be misclassified as a Speed Limit sign in 100% of the testing conditions, and one that causes a Right Turn sign to be misclassified as either a Stop or Added Lane sign in 100% of the testing conditions.
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by JeppsOnFire »

Rockie wrote:No really, if me or any other pilot is already obsolete we're not needed right? We are just getting in the way and of no use. More specifically the judgement we bring to the job is not needed since that's what we're discussing here.

You said I was already obsolete, I disagree. Prove I'm obsolete...

Air Canada 759
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by Cat Driver »

Oh, oh that might end this subject until someone does an investigation to determine if that comment has merit.
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by Rockie »

JeppsOnFire wrote:
Rockie wrote:No really, if me or any other pilot is already obsolete we're not needed right? We are just getting in the way and of no use. More specifically the judgement we bring to the job is not needed since that's what we're discussing here.

You said I was already obsolete, I disagree. Prove I'm obsolete...

Air Canada 759
Are you suggesting a pilotless airplane wouldn't have done that...or much worse? Personally I doubt a pilotless airplane would have made it to the takeoff runway to begin with without causing some kind of incident, and certainly wouldn't have made it all the way to San Francisco without causing a catastrophe without everybody else getting out of the way.
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by confusedalot »

Bullet trains and ships still have crews. Just say'n. But hey, airplanes are far simpler than these objects. :lol:
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by JeppsOnFire »

Rockie wrote:
JeppsOnFire wrote:
Rockie wrote:No really, if me or any other pilot is already obsolete we're not needed right? We are just getting in the way and of no use. More specifically the judgement we bring to the job is not needed since that's what we're discussing here.

You said I was already obsolete, I disagree. Prove I'm obsolete...

Air Canada 759
Are you suggesting a pilotless airplane wouldn't have done that...or much worse? Personally I doubt a pilotless airplane would have made it to the takeoff runway to begin with without causing some kind of incident, and certainly wouldn't have made it all the way to San Francisco without causing a catastrophe without everybody else getting out of the way.

Are you suggesting a pilotless airplane would have flown the Bridge Visual for 28R?

Think bigger. Our contemporary air traffic system would be incompatible with a pilotless airplane. No visuals, increased spacing, more aircraft and airport system redundancies. Pilotless just means no asses in the front seats - it doesn't disqualify remote intervention during flight by a breathing human. The whole system would need an upgrade - so a target of 2025 is ridiculous. Thankfully, not likely while I'm a working pilot and probably not even after I retire and I'm just riding in the back.

Remember when we all cried foul when the first fly by wire came down the line? It's coming. Baby steps.
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by Panama Jack »

It seems like many people assume that technology develops in a linear fashion (i.e. looking back at the last 20 years to project the next 20). However, it seems that technological development has followed somewhat of an exponential curve since the last 100 years. This makes it difficult to accurately predict the future but I never thought even 10 years ago that I would be corresponding with you folks for free using my phone.
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by Rockie »

What people are claiming is that a time will come when either judgement will no longer be required in aviation, or human judgement will be replaced by artificial judgement. The former will never happen because there will never be a time when all the variables can be controlled. The latter will require true artificial intelligence, and that opens up a can of worms so big aviation will be way down the list of ethical and practical concerns.
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by B208 »

I can see this happening for scheduled airline service, (i.e. aircraft flying to a controlled airport with runways served by ILS's or LPV). I don't see it happening in smaller bush operators or charter flights to remote airports. The human judgement will still be required, but could be supplied from the ground either in the form of ATC or remotely piloted aircraft.

The down fall to this system is that it is not robust. A couple of dudes with GPS jammers could toast the whole system.
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by Mach1 »

Let's start with this:

http://mothership.sg/2017/01/5-white-co ... to-robots/

And this:

https://www.top500.org/news/watson-prov ... ng-cancer/

This:

https://qz.com/875491/japanese-white-co ... elligence/

Or this:

http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/automat ... -1.3982466

This:

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/ ... ollar-jobs

Or this:

http://time.com/4742543/robots-jobs-machines-work/

The world is undergoing a rapid change and it's not just blue collar labour jobs on the chopping block anymore. AI's are currently better at diagnosing patients than doctors, helping people with legal problems, have all but eliminated stock brokers and financial advisers. People are increasingly more comfortable dealing with machines than people.

The real issue will become, what happens when the working class becomes the useless class? Society is going to undergo some major changes in the next 50 years.
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by Mr. North »

I remember posting a bout this ten years ago when the majority of pilots were in denial. Interesting to see the evolution of perception here.

It is only a matter of time of course and change won't come all at once, it will be small but methodical. The military of course is constantly expanding it's drone program. Who's next? Aerial survey. It's already happening on a small scale. Soon regulations will be in place to allow for large drone, long range surveys. Crop dusting, fire suppression.. high risk, specialised (expensive) sectors of aviation will be next. After that it will be air cargo. Think FedEx, UPS, CargoJet, all stand to gain from pilotless aircraft, especially since there are no passengers to object. While this is occurring I can see airlines going down to one pilot. Eventually the airlines will be pilotless (starting with the budget carriers), although they will most likely be the last segment in aviation to do so.

I think my career is safe for at least the next 20 years. The only wildcard I see on the horizon is the acceptance of autonomous cars. It's interesting how people fear flying without a pilot but they have no problem getting into an autonomous car (which I find to be much more dangerous, at least right now). With the wide scale adoption of autonomous cars comes widespread acceptance of AI in other fields like aviation. So if in 5 years everyone is letting their car drive them to work, well I'd argue autonomous airliners won't be far behind.

We are far from the only profession threatened by AI. Everyone from truckers and retail sales to nurses and accountants will feel be impacted. The future of employment in general is going to undergo a radical shift over the next several years. And as some people mentioned here, exactly how does someone coming out of high school plan for their future? Good question. If you were 20 today with a fresh CPL, can you honestly say that you'll retire as a 777 skipper at 65? Hard to picture where any of us would be at that point.
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by digits_ »

The only thing you'll always need will be instructors to get people their PPLs.

Instructors have the best job security.

That being said, companies are still operating 1944 airplanes commercially. Taking that logic into account, it is going to be at least another 74 years untill the last "airplane-with-pilot" is going to disappear if we all switch to pilot less airplanes tomorrow.
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by trey kule »

The real issue will become, what happens when the working class becomes the useless class? Society is going to undergo some major changes in the nex
Lets see. The govt will have to figure out how to tax robots

They will have to change the charter to ensure terrorist robots have their rights protected

They will have to prepare for an influx of criminal refugee robots entering the country illegally

The pilots unions will demand longer rest periods for robots to recharge

Yes there will be changes
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by mato »

Automation will happen. wont be long. We need to rethink wealth distribution. How will people make money? We wont need to work for a living, we will just live for a living... Sounds fantastic to me! Biggest issue with automation (as we know it will be more reliable than the human) is that its not ever going to be 100% perfect. We will need to program it with the logic that it will use when it has not choice but to "fail".

Take a car for example, if the automated car is put in a situation where it must crash either into the car in front of it or swerve to the side-walk and hit a person. What logic will we program the automation, hit the car or hit the person walking? We can't always make it fool proof. Fact is, why do we care to have pilots up front? Its all about blame. Us humans like to point the finger and always blame someone. That is easy to do when we have people at work. We need that liability and ability to point the finger and assign fault. With automation when we crash, it's no ones fault. The car, the plane, the train did as the logic was programmed. It will always have to be an "act of god". I think that is the one big hurdle to the revolution.
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by confusedalot »

Well....better get those pilotless planes up and running in a big hurry. Now that the cat is out of the bag, who in their right young mind will train as a pilot?

Bad moon rising, this is going to be fun to see.
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by FighterPilot »

Full automation is going to happen, no question about it. I think it's foolish for us pilots to deny it. We don't want to get caught like Sears or Blockbuster being fine with the status quo. That being said, I feel the trucking, train and shipping industry will come first and with what is learned there applied to aviation. I envision the airline industry will be the first to adopt pilot less aircraft, they've got the best infrastructure set up for it and one could argue it's already heavily automated. I could see them going down to just single pilot airlines first before fully removing someone up front. Like the Second Officer, the First Officer will soon be a thing of the past. However, when you look at how dated the infrastructure is in Canada's north, NDBs for example, some of the northern/bush flying will be the last to be automated. I can't see all the northern operators running out and replacing their aircraft with shiny new robot planes, there might be an excess of pilots again driving down wages and making the older "dumb" planes cheaper to operate.

It will be interesting to see how this will all pan out. Someday all us young pilots will be sitting around telling stories of the "good old days" of how we actually had to fly the aircraft in the past.
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by confusedalot »

Seems to me that GPS driven equipment would easily solve the Northern issue; the question of course is whether the operators could actually afford the shiny new pilotless planes. Fancy updated super precise GPS with an autoland=lots of dollars. One thing that can be kicked down the priority list up North is traffic avoidance, easier to manage than high density airspace, so maybe a cheaper form of the serious top shelf avoidance wares?

I can actually see all of this happening in tame airspace before it hits Atlanta.
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Re: The solution to pilot shortage?

Post by timel »

No more pilots, no more avcanada :mrgreen:
Damn.
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