Jul 27, 2003

Vegas Again

Jul 26, 2003


Ellsworth Kelly, Blue, Green, Yellow, Orange, Red, 1966. Oil on canvas, five panels,
60 x 240 inches overall. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. 67.1833.a-.e.

Jul 21, 2003

Vegas


Las Vegas: It's what the whole world would be doing on
Saturday night if the Nazis had won the war.
-- Hunter. S Thompson

Jul 9, 2003

Web Services at Work

01:09:52 07/10/2003 :CMQSearch 4196 Can't connect to server: clients.mapquest.com, 7820 01:10:15 07/10/2003 :CMQSearch 4196 Can't connect to server: clients.mapquest.com, 7820 01:10:38 07/10/2003 :CMQSearch 4196 Can't connect to server: clients.mapquest.com, 7820 01:10:38 07/10/2003 :Locator 2.0 connectlib_4.5 4196 DLConnectServices::ParsePOIs : Attempted to do spatial search in database, but no places were geocoded.

In-flight entertainment systems linked to scores of jet 'difficulties' Safety concerns grow: U.S. carriers have reported 60 incidents since 1998

By Gary Stoller
USA TODAY

In-flight entertainment systems linked to scores of jet 'difficulties' Safety concerns grow: U.S. carriers have reported 60 incidents since 1998 wiring-related Swissair crash

As a Boeing 757 airliner climbed to 14,000 feet in March, a routine takeoff suddenly became an emergency. Sparks and smoke came out of the passenger cabin's in-flight entertainment system, cockpit instrument lights lit up, and the rudder and control wheel moved.

The pilots, who reported the incident to a government safety database, said they returned for an ''uneventful'' landing. The database doesn't identify the airline involved or the U.S. airport the flight diverted to, but the timing of the event was significant.

It was the same month the Canadian government concluded that entertainment system wiring may have caused or contributed to a fire that sent a Swissair jet into the ocean near Nova Scotia in 1998, killing all 229 aboard. The Canadian Transportation Safety Board said an entertainment system wire or another wire short-circuited, creating a fiery electric arc that ignited acoustic insulation blankets.

Despite intense scrutiny after the Swissair accident, in-flight entertainment systems continue to malfunction, and U.S. airlines are still being ordered to modify some systems.

A USA TODAY analysis found that since the Swissair accident, U.S. airlines have sent the Federal Aviation Administration 60 ''service difficulty reports'' about in-flight entertainment systems, many involving fire, smoke or sparks. Airlines are required by the FAA to report within 72 hours each ''failure, malfunction or defect'' that endangers an aircraft's safe operation.

Full article at USATODAY.com

Jul 2, 2003

Invention