20 Freescale Semiconductor Employees On Missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 190
NeverVotedBush writes with news reported by CNN that a passenger manifest for the flight that went missing on its way from Malaysia to China indicates that "Twenty of the passengers aboard the flight work with Freescale Semiconductor, a company based in Austin, Texas. The company said that 12 of the employees are from Malaysia and eight are from China," and writes "Apparently, at least two passengers used stolen passports to board."
Cargo (Score:3, Funny)
The plane was carrying a cargo of 400 million dollars in Bitcoin. nuff said.
Re:Cargo (Score:5, Insightful)
And we learned that you can board a plane with passport that was stolen and REPORTED stolen on an airplane, as long as you leave your shampoo at home an remove your shoes before boarding.
Re:Cargo (Score:5, Insightful)
In Malaysia.
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On domestic flights here in Norway they don't check IDs anymore, they used to but basically nobody really looked twice at it and you could go anywhere by car or train or bus or whatever anyway. The security control is supposed to pick up on anything dangerous you bring along. That you can travel on a stolen passport is more a customs and immigration problem, if it turns out these people were able to bring explosives or something to bring the plane down that's the problem whether they were travelling under t
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Not just domestic, but inside Schengen. I've flown to Switzerland (once, and I've flown that route MANY times) without showing any ID ever - checkin was automatic, bagdrop was automatic, and from then on I just had to show the bording card (which no-one actually looked at except to beep the barcode). I could have checked in in your name without any issues.
Basically the airlines are the only ones checking any ID as long as you're flying inside Schengen.
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As there is no American aboard that plane, move along, there is nothing to see here ...
Not so. There were three Americans in the group of 239 that died on that flight.
The premise of your comment is ignorant.
Re:No American aboard ... move along, folks ! (Score:4, Interesting)
Hold on a sec we don't know if they're dead yet. I mean they could have been abducted by aliens you know.
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No, alien abductions only seem to happen to the most stupid people you ever meet. There were way too many smart people on the plane to have the alien encounter (cause aliens are scared of smart people).
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No, alien abductions only seem to happen to the most stupid people you ever meet. There were way too many smart people on the plane to have the alien encounter (cause aliens are scared of smart people).
Also, all alien encounters seems to be limited to what US government can cover up, the aliens doesn't seem to be interested in the rest of the world.
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If you guys are so smart, how come you still have PhD's?
And grad students. Really. Get with the program.
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Strange, I thought that it originated in the Jonestown mass murder-suicide of several hundreds (thousands) of Christian idiots in Venezuela somewhere, in the late 1970s. The group members were given their self-administered poison dissolved in "Kool-Aid", partly to hide it's nature from the many children murdered by their religious parents.
As the old saying goes - religion poisons EVERYTHING it touches.
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...they could have been abducted by aliens you know.
Reporter: There's a rumor that your son was abducted by aliens.
Nathan Arizona: Son, don't print that. If the wife reads it, she'll lose all hope.
Was there any ACARS data? (Score:5, Informative)
I watched a documentary about Flight 447 (the Airbus flight that was lost off Brazil) and they mentioned that modern planes send tons of position and other data per flight. Seems the current system is called ACARS [wikipedia.org].
Anyway, from a probability perspective it seems highly unlikely that a plane would disappear from radar precisely at the time that a data transponder stopped sending position fixes, unless, you know, the plane crashed right there.
I mean, the media makes it sound like the search radius is "flight speed * remaining potential flight time at current fuel burn rate".
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So far there is no debris at all. Thats pretty amazing considered where it was last seen. It either didn't crash, or didn't crash where the search is.
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So far there is no debris at all. Thats pretty amazing considered where it was last seen. It either didn't crash, or didn't crash where the search is.
Not "amazing" at all if the jet was VAPPORIZED by a small thermonuclear device placed on the jet by the same NSA operatives that brought down the Twin Towers.
CO-INKY-DINK?
Re:Was there any ACARS data? (Score:4, Funny)
Aren't they the same guys who make Steve Guttenberg a star?
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Doubtful, they didn't even manage to hold back the Electric Car, and I'm not going to call "Rigged!" on the Oscars just yet...
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Leonardo Di Caprio still hasn't won one. Are you sure they aren't rigged?
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I'm sure a bunch of guys with nothing better to do are sadly exclaiming "We do!".
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placed on the jet by the same NSA operatives
lol I love it; used to be everyone thought the CIA was doing things, now it's the NSA. The conspiracy theory has evolved.
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Does becoming vappor hurt more than becoming vapor? I'm pretty sure it's painless if it happens quick enough, though it's difficult to determine since vappor hasn't been studied.
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Hand moving above head from front to back.
Whosh
Re:Was there any ACARS data? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Was there any ACARS data? (Score:5, Informative)
ADS/CPDLC [nec.com] runs over ACARS and definitely sends position data. Believe me, I used to code this stuff for a living.
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ACARS is on 131.55 MHz, ADS-B is 1090 MHz, for one.
Don't confuse a coder with fancy hardware talk.
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ACARS is a network service. ADS is an application.
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So far there is no debris at all. Thats pretty amazing considered where it was last seen. It either didn't crash, or didn't crash where the search is.
Latest I've heard was that Vietnamese boats found two large oil slicks - but no debris yet...
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Re:Was there any ACARS data? (Score:5, Interesting)
It could be more complicated then that.
Suppose an electrical fault cause the loss of coordinate transmission while it also lost navigation and the pilots were forces to fly manually and blindly for a while before they lost all control and the plane crashed. A jets under ideal conditions can glide around 70 or so miles from 35000 feet in the air.
So if the jet lost portions of the planes controls in stages, it could be quite a large search radius from the last known position and it could be close to the limit of the fuel range if they could still control the engines (doubtful as most everything is fly by wire and a catastrophic electronics failure likely would consume that too).
Re:Was there any ACARS data? (Score:5, Insightful)
The only problem with the thought of losing portions of the planes controls in stages, the first two or three would have had to have quickly knocked out the transponders, the pilots radio (separate from the transponders) and the backup radio (separate from the transponders and the primary radio) before affecting anything else on the plane that would have caused the pilots to message someone on the ground that bad things were happening. Transponders disappearing usually gets a call from someone on the ground, which the pilots would respond to if they could. Needing to switch to a backup radio will have the pilots letting someone on the ground know in short order. If you assume they lost electrical system power due to total engine failure (which would merit a fairly rapid SOS call as a result), that still wouldn't prevent the ram air turbine from generating the power needed to send a distress call.
It isn't unreasonable to start from an assumption of catastrophic failure of the airframe and start your search on that basis while investigating other possibilities in parallel. It could also be due to a pilot or co-pilot deciding they wanted to take the plane down, however, since the transponder can be disabled from the cockpit (Think Egypt Air MS990, though that was never declared officially to be a pilot suicide), but then the plane would have quickly shown up as a transponder-less blip on multiple radar systems, since that air space is quite well covered along the flight path and to both the south and west. To the north east, it should have been picked up at Con Son, unless it really was under control to head back south east towards Riau Islands. Chances are good, whatever direction it went, including straight down, either the Malaysian or Vietnamese govts. will eventually announce the radar tracks they watched it on, given that the last transponder point had the flight only ~250 km from the closest Malaysian airport (not to mention Malaysian Navy ships out on normal patrols) and about 1/2 of that from a Vietnamese naval base which it would have flown directly over if it had continued on path.
Hmm, just checked Google News for an update. Reported in the last 30 minutes, the Malaysian military is saying the plane appeared to turn back south according to radar.
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Nice try, but the captain has been flying commercial jets since the early 1980s, according to the BBC.
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Right, because you were in the cabin with him all that time.
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Apparently, at least two passengers used stolen passports to board.
Sudden catastrophic decompression could lead to structural collapse of the entire fuselage destroying an aircraft almost instantly. Lack of any distress signal possibly indicates that the pilots did not have enough time to do so . IMHO Investigators should have a careful look at the airport where the boarding took place.
Having said that , The possibility of pilot error or mechanical faliure cannot be completely ruled out at this point.
Re:Was there any ACARS data? (Score:4, Interesting)
IMHO Investigators should have a careful look at the airport where the boarding took place
As I live and travel a lot within Asia, I can tell you that many airports in Asia, particularly those in Indonesia and in Malaysia (and also in Thailand) are so lack in any security procedure that any suicide bomber can board a plane easily.
And in Malaysia as well as in Brunei and in Indonesia, I have seen with my own eyes that they let women who cover up their faces passing through checkpoint and boarding planes.
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The stolen passports are of course something to look at but for all we know, it could be quite common in that part of the world and what people seem to forget is that a stolen passport is not an explosive. Heck, if you're a suicide bomber there, you could just as well use your own passport when they don't have TSA type no-fly lists. The fact that no organization has yet claimed responsibility is another reason why i have a hard time suspecting foul play. Many times a bunch of (incompetent) terrorist groups
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The reports are now that the two stolen passports were used at the same time and location to buy consecutive tickets but with different destinations though the same origin. While it doesn't prove a terrorist link, that two passports were stolen from two different people but then used together in this way is pretty suspicious.
Not that suspicious. Could be low-level or mid-level organized crime, or just illegal immigrants to a location, or people with a felony history that would keep them out of a country, or a victim of human trafficking escorted by a trafficker, or dissidents kept on a no-fly list, or anyone with an interest in being off the grid.
It does, however, point out the limited usefulness of the move along the US border to require passports rather than birth certificates for entry after 9/11. I'm sure it makes entry s
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If those passports were stolen by terrorists, their affiliated organization would have piped up by now to claim responsibility for it.
You gotta understand ... (Score:3, Informative)
You are talking from a perspective of a Western folk who has no idea what is going on in other parts of the world.
The airplane belongs to the Malaysian Airline System (MAS). The plane took off from the KLIA airport, again, of Malaysia. That radar which did the tracking (actually there were 4 radars doing the tracking) were all operated by ... Malaysians.
Furthermore, the pilot and first officer of that plane were from Malaysia.
Everything points to the same thing - Malaysia - a country whereby RACE means ev
Sepang F1 GP... (Score:5, Funny)
"Malaysia - a country whereby RACE means everything."
Thats in 3 weeks time, and since everything in Formula 1 is different this year who knows whats going to happen
Yay slashdot! (Score:3)
Hey, look! Slashdot mods as informative racist rants against Malaysians!
I know we're a bit of a groupthink crowd, but seriously. Stop. Just stop.
Re:Yay slashdot! (Score:5, Informative)
I see we have never been to Malaysia.
I remember the first time I was in Kuala Lumpur, I was shocked to see newspaper ads for apartments that openly declared "Chinese only" or "Malay Muslim woman only, 18-25" or some such. The racism is all out in the open and codified in law. Every citizen's mandatory ID card has a field for race and religion. Race is there because different people's votes count differently come election time, and religion is there so that when you're eating during the day on Ramadan, when the religious police come into the restaurants you show them and you don't get arrested.
Did we learn something today? Much better than just ignorantly shouting "RACISM!" at a culture with which we are unfamiliar.
Racism still racist (Score:2)
I see we have never been to Malaysia.
I remember the first time I was in Kuala Lumpur, I was shocked to see newspaper ads for apartments that openly declared "Chinese only" or "Malay Muslim woman only, 18-25" or some such. The racism is all out in the open and codified in law. Every citizen's mandatory ID card has a field for race and religion. Race is there because different people's votes count differently come election time, and religion is there so that when you're eating during the day on Ramadan, when the religious police come into the restaurants you show them and you don't get arrested.
Did we learn something today? Much better than just ignorantly shouting "RACISM!" at a culture with which we are unfamiliar.
Actually, racism is still racism even when and if it is openly endorsed by society.
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the MARA college which produces graduates that the Malaysian private sector itself has steadfastly refuse to employ.
The private sector may refuse to employ people out of sheer dumb prejudice too. Historically it has and many businesses still do, even in liberal nations.
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I watched a documentary about Flight 447 (the Airbus flight that was lost off Brazil) and they mentioned that modern planes send tons of position and other data per flight. Seems the current system is called ACARS [wikipedia.org].
Anyway, from a probability perspective it seems highly unlikely that a plane would disappear from radar precisely at the time that a data transponder stopped sending position fixes, unless, you know, the plane crashed right there.
I mean, the media makes it sound like the search radius is "flight speed * remaining potential flight time at current fuel burn rate".
I'm pretty sure we'll find that this is the "religion of peace" again.
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Anyway, from a probability perspective it seems highly unlikely that a plane would disappear from radar precisely at the time that a data transponder stopped sending position fixes, unless, you know, the plane crashed right there. I mean, the media makes it sound like the search radius is "flight speed * remaining potential flight time at current fuel burn rate".
My reading is that ACARS updates position only few minutes whereas radar update times is faster. As for search area, the initial search area is where the plane disappeared off the coast of Vietnam. The max search area is based on remaining fuel. It is theoretically possible as the plane may have changed courses. Not probable, but possible.
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A sudden breakup of the plane would preclude any ACARS data indicating distress from being sent from the plane.
Yes, that was my point. ACARS isn't a distress signal, as far as I understand it. Receiving a constant log of position fixes via ACARS that ceases at approximately the same time and position that all ground-based radar systems lose track of the aircraft tends to strongly circumscribe the likely search radius. Bayesian statistics and all that.
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"d) shot down by North Korea, China, someone else"
Since it was nowhere near North Korea I think that can be ruled out. Of course Vietnam or China could have shot it down, but the latter seems unlikely.
I am sure they have boats out analysing the oil slicks that were found tto see if they could be from the plane.
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Can I ask some additional questions?
How it it different with ships? A ship can be in the middle of the pacific and you can track its location, speed and heading online. What technology are they using?
When you view an aircraft's track on a site like FlightAware, where is the data coming from? Is it guesstimating based on ATC data?
Why wouldn't an EPIRB work post-crash? Why does a Cessna have an EPIRB but not a 777?
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FlightAware is coalescing a range of data. In the US they can use a time-delayed FAA radar feeds, feeds from ADS-B receivers, possibly other aircraft originated data (ADS-A/C), and fore-knowledge of the expected location based on filed plans and aircraft speed to date. In Australia there's little radar coverage over the interior or outer sea approaches: ground-based ADS systems are useful but there are significant blind spots and ATC relies on aircraft reports over voice (VHF, HF, sometimes satellite) an
And this means...? (Score:2)
Now don't get me wrong, that's not to say that the loss of these people is any less bad, but I have to wonder if we're overestimating the importance of the fact that there were Freescale employees on the flight.
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The entire company could be killed next year by a disease transmitted by a dirty telephone.
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The entire company could be killed next year by a disease transmitted by a dirty telephone.
And no wouild have noticed...
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Well, we keep bitching about "why is this non-tech news on /.?", so they had to find a tech angle in order to get the story on here.
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He's got 1 whole digit more than you. You've 2 more than someone else I know.
You can put the e-peen away now.
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Aren't you happy to know that you're not flaming some fake Zontar?
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According to Freescale's statement [freescale.com], eight of the individuals were Chinese employees and twelve were Malaysian. My guess is that they were probably management and Process Engineers traveling to a factory in China to oversee production of a new product.
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In theory that's correct, for instance our company has a policy that a manager and no more than two of his direct reports can be on a flight together, but the number of times that policy is violated when a bunch of the bigwigs are taking the chartered jet to a meeting far away makes it a bit toothless in reality. Who's going to fire the CEO and a bunch of EVP's?
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Summary needs a slight rewrite (Score:3, Informative)
Freescale Semiconductor did not write that blurb about the stolen passports and the way it is displayed here makes it seem that there is a connection between the passports and the company's employees.
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First the ~5000 pages of i.mx53 documentation and now this! This is pure and unadulterated terrorism I tell you.
Re:Summary needs a slight rewrite (Score:5, Insightful)
The stolen passports likely have nothing to do with Freescale, but in regards to those passports, they've already determined that the two tickets purchased for those two identities where purchased at the same time - they have consecutive ticket numbers. Further, and oddly, the two had different final destinations.
A conceivable theory is that they were terrorists with explosives in their checked in baggage. The plan was for the explosives to detonate later than they did (but something caused one to detonate prematurely), thus taking down two flights and not just one. Further, they may have intended to disembark or not board those final flights while intending their luggage to continue on (perhaps they did a test run and found that luggage was not properly removed from the plane if a passenger did not board a connecting flight at the destination Chinese airport). There was a Chinese terrorist attack in the last couple weeks (the mass killings with knives) and this plane was carrying almost all Chinese citizens, and it was headed for China. If that speculation is correct, two planes would have been destroyed, doubling the amount of Chinese that were killed, and the destruction would have happened over China, thus potentially causing collateral damage.
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Interesting idea about the drone however most drones can only fly slowly so it would be hard to match the speed of a airliner.
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Motorola used to have rules against that, IIRC (Score:5, Interesting)
Granted, it has been a while since I worked for the part of Motorola that became Freescale, but I am fairly certain there were rules against the maximum number of employees that could take any one flight. I think it was 2 for executives and 6 or 8 for regular employees. Situations like this, rare as they are, was the reason. I wonder if Freescale still has those rules and ignored them, or didn't copy them over. Any current employees have insight?
I hope the families receive meaningful information as to what and why this happened, and don't have to spend a year or longer wondering (at least for the what, why usually takes a lot longer with airline crashes).
The 777 is one of the safest commercial planes in the aviation history, with only one accident with fatalities prior to this. Having just flown on a 777 (Cathay Pacific) out of Kuala Lumpur less than 30 days ago, however, I will say that their airport security was very lax. When I set off the metal detector and was wanded, the security person stopped at the first thing that might have set it off (I had left a metal-bodied pen in my shirt pocket) and didn't go on to find I also forgot to take out my cell phone and earphones from a different pocket (cargo pants). That was just for entry to the main concourse, though. To actually get on the plane, Cathay Pacific required a secondary screening that was much more rigorous from what I observed of how they dealt with other people (I remembered to put away my pen and phone that time). Malaysia Air did not do a secondary screening for a domestic flight when I boarded in Sandakan a few days earlier, but the concourse screening was also more intensive.
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Pffff. I flew into KL a few weeks ago and I gotta say security was ridiculous. My plane had to stop to refuel and about five times before landing they warn you over the air that if you have any drugs on you when they land you'll be executed (the plane WAS from Amsterdam). Everyone had to disembark (and we weren't allowed to take any baggage). Then through metal detector + xray + pat down for everyone. Seemed a tad overkill for a plane refueling. I mean, I get security before entering a plane, but land
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A) The point under discussion was security on the way out, not on the way in. Since you were just passing through, perhaps airport security was given a heads up to look for something specific to your flight? You did say you were coming from Amsterdam, after all. Arriving into KL from Hong Kong, my flight had no additional screening, and immigration procedures into and out of Malaysia are the easiest I have ever dealt with in any country (you don't fill in any paperwork, they take it all off of your passp
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They didn't slow down to land
What was the windspeed and direction at the time of landing? What did ATC indicate was the minimum landing speed for wind conditions at the airport? What did the aircraft / company manual indicate what minimum approach speeds were for the conditions provided by ATC?
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They didn't slow down to land
What was the windspeed and direction at the time of landing? What did ATC indicate was the minimum landing speed for wind conditions at the airport? What did the aircraft / company manual indicate what minimum approach speeds were for the conditions provided by ATC?
There's so much wrong with this statement that it makes my head hurt. Who the hell thinks ATC dictates landing speeds? Those are determined by the pilots. If you asked ATC what your approach speed should be, they'd laugh you out of their airspace.
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That may be so but that's not what they said in the cabin.
They announced five times in slightly different ways "drug traffiking gets the death penalty, capital punishment in malaysia for drug traffiking, etc."
And on the boarding cards, getting off at the arrival gate, etc., there were signs saying the same thing in BIG RED LETTERS.
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You fly into a Malaysian airport with dope--that's trafficking. Better hope you can bribe the hangman well enough that he actually makes the rope long enough to break your neck.
But don't take my word for it--try it yourself with a small amount and let us know how that works out for you.
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Most likely it was scrapped - plane crashes being rare things, it's easier and cheaper to book a s
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I just flew out of KL last night on a Malaysia Airlines flight (another 777), less than 24 hours after MH370.
I think they've tightened things up a little - forgot a couple of coins in my pocket at the first screening and set off the detector, got the full pat down. Then at the gate they were screening again immediately before boarding and doing it thoroughly. First time in this part of the world I've seen them making people take off watches & belts.
Seemed to be a few more uniformed guards around than us
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OK Try IBM. Worked for them in the 90's [...] There must have been 30 of us on the same flight. They tried to get the other 20 making up the same party on the same flight but it was full.
Was IBM doing one of their so-called "Resource Actions" at the time . . . ?
Did your manager look surprised when you returned from the event . . . ?
Bond Villain Voice: "Ah, Mr. IBMer! . . . I wasn't expecting you . . .
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Really? A trading company I worked for would routinely have 20-50 employees on the same flight for company-sponsored weekends away.
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I haven't heard of a single company that doesn't have limits on how many employees can travel with the same aircraft/bus/hovercraft/whatever. It's simple, quite cheap risk management.
A previous company I worked with put 180 of the 250 employees on the same flight to a company gathering - the other 70 came by another plane. Even at say a max limit of 40 you'd need seven planes instead of two and when each route has one plane/day either you need to fly them in stages or fly to other nearby cities and have them shuttled in, it would be a huge logistics nightmare. And I don't know any company I've worked for that wouldn't load up a rented bus full of employees. I think the alternative would
My guess is bomb... (Score:1)
Reason why it would be a bomb is that the plane disappeared from radar without sending message to controllers. Thus the breakup of the plane is so quick that pilots couldnt send message. Only thing that can cause quick breakup of whole plane is a bomb or missile. And bomb is more likely.
Also they think there is two unknown persons on board with false passports. Maybe they never boarded the plane or left too early, and werent in the plane when it crashed. False passports sounds exactly like what is needed to
Tech news, much? (Score:2)
But while this is newsworthy, hoping that the discourse will evolve into a meritorious discussion of the technologies in use during such flights, the tech and techniques intended to prevent this specific kind of situation, and/or interesting details
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I dunno. I realize things around here have somewhat changed; hell, I'm pretty new here, anyway. I would rather not be the "is this really news for nerds?" guy. Actually I haven't noticed that slogan printed on this site since certain changes were implemented.
Actually, the mandatory on-topicness for tech news on Slashdot died on 11 Sep 2001 [slashdot.org]. That topic got thousands of posts from "the audience" (*cough*), and tech relevance forever after took a back seat to potential ad impressions for proposed content.
I know, I know, people always point to the "...stuff that matters" part of the slogan. However, that's a retcon construction, as proven by the fact that the content was on-topic for years before they chose to digress. It's like how the U.S. Constitution is basical
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Except of course you are conflating "fear of or the risk of terrorism are overstated" with "there is no such thing as terrorism." I could get shot by some nut in public tomorrow, but I'm not going to structure my life or society around the fear of that possibility.
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No, that is not what everyone on slashdot are saying.
What we are saying is:
So, to falsify the common slashdot knowledge, you'd have to show all of the following:
and..
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I think it was the second Flying High! (Airplane) movie where an old lady gets grilled while dudes with guns walk through the scanners.
No problem taking liquid on board (Score:1)
In Indonesia as well as in Malaysia I myself have carried out "experiments" when I board a plane.
I put plastic bottles (some time one, some time more than one) and filled them up with liquids, and then put them into my luggage and also carry on luggage.
They let me pass. No problem.
And as I have mentioned in another comment - I have seen with my own eyes that the airport security officers let people (supposedly female) who cover up their face to pass the security checkpoint (without having to reveal their tr
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I put plastic bottles (some time one, some time more than one) and filled them up with liquids, and then put them into my luggage and also carry on luggage.
Did you also include the large mixing pump system necessary for binary explosives? Douche.
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Did you also include the large mixing pump system necessary for binary explosives?
Either a large mixing pump is not actually necessary, or the TSA has been banning the wrong things from all passenger flights for the last ten years.
Either or both of those things is quite plausible, actually.
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It's a big deal for a struggling semiconductor company like Freescale to lose that much talent in one go.
It has been suggested on al-Jazeera that the two in question were Iranian terrorists and that this was a terror attack to retaliate against US sponsorship if Israel's program of assassinating Iranian nuclear scientists.
That's the link to be explored here.
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That sounds rather farfetched. Terrorists blowing up a Malaysian plane traveling to China because the US and/or Israel are killing Iranian scientists? Seriously? In case you haven't heard, China has been having a bit of a terrorism problem of its own lately, which makes a lot more sense.
Given the current political climate, I'd be more inclined to believe something along the lines of:
US Governmental Secret Agencies Destroy Malaysian Flight attempting to show that NOWHERE IN THE WORLD is safe from Terrorist Homosexual Paedophile Cannabis-users who hoard Files Released by Snowden.
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