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IT Technology

Southwest Airlines Cancels 500 Flights After Computer Glitch Grounds Fleet (reuters.com) 32

Southwest Airlines said on Tuesday it canceled about 500 flights and delayed hundreds of others after it was forced to temporarily halt operations over a computer issue -- the second time in 24 hours it had been forced to stop flights. From a report: The Federal Aviation Administration said it had issued a temporary nationwide groundstop at the request of Southwest Airlines to resolve a computer reservation issue. The groundstop lasted about 45 minutes, and ended at 2:30 p.m. EDT (1830 GMT), it said. Southwest said its operations were returning to normal. The issue was the result of "intermittent performance issues with our network connectivity." Southwest delayed nearly 1,300 flights on Tuesday, or 37% of its flights, according to flight tracker FlightAware.
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Southwest Airlines Cancels 500 Flights After Computer Glitch Grounds Fleet

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  • off and on (Score:5, Funny)

    by darkain ( 749283 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @06:13PM (#61491204) Homepage

    Have you tried turning the plane off and back on again?

  • Switch to star link they said...
  • Clearly, I have the utmost confidence in Southwest Airlines to jet me around at 40,000 feet when they can't even get a terrestrial computer system to work. Let's go sit on a plane, wearing masks, in 115 degree heat in Vegas. Vegas, baby! Yet more evidence these things are a big series of death tubes.
    • Can't wait for when the majority of the cars and trucks out there are on autopilot and then an oopsie with the computers happens. This time it was grounded planes, next time it will be crashing vehicles.

      • FSD vehicles do not require network connectivity to operate.
        • by darkain ( 749283 )

          YET! :-O

          • Exactly! Self-driving cars will work much more efficiently if they are networked, for example, allowing closer spacing. Computer crash = car crash.

    • Maintaining an aircraft and maintaining an airline booking system are two separate competencies. It's possible to be good at one and bad at the other. And it's not like Southwest is developing the software that runs their 737s.
  • Just let people on (Score:4, Interesting)

    by aberglas ( 991072 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @08:50PM (#61491582)

    If your reservation system dies, just trust passengers to say they have a ticket and let them on. A few will slip though, but much better than shutting everything down.

    • by sinij ( 911942 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @09:30PM (#61491676)
      I think reservation system in this case handles much more than just passenger registration. Plus, what you suggest is likely explicitly against FAA rules.
    • I don't think you can do that for security reasons.
    • by arosenfield ( 998621 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @11:35PM (#61491878)

      Paper tickets can still be used as backup.

      In 2015, I was flying on Alaska when their computer systems went down. Thankfully I got to the airport plenty early that day. I wasn't able to check in online the night before, nor were their automated kiosks able to check me, so I spoke with a human at the checkin area who told me the computers were down. He had a cached copy of the flight manifest on his laptop, and he hand-wrote me a paper boarding pass. I went through security with that no problem.

      While waiting at the gate, about 30 minutes prior to the scheduled departure they announced that their computer systems came back and asked anyone with a hand-written boarding pass to exchange it for a real printed boarding pass. It took off only a tad behind schedule.

    • by k6mfw ( 1182893 )
      Reminds me when the cafeteria registers went belly up (they're all tied to a central system) during the morning. They tried rebooting but it quickly became apparent it will take time and the lines were getting long, so they just said "don't bother, it's free." Lunchtime came around, system still down but the grill was still working along with the deli bar. So the lunch was free. Of course we have well behaved employees that understand not appropriate to game the system during this glitch.
  • by DrMrLordX ( 559371 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @09:05PM (#61491628)

    At least they didn't have to pay a ransom.

  • I have a coworker that was supposed to fly into Chicago this morning. His direct flight was cancelled again, as was the afternoon one.
    • Even after the initial event is ended, there is a cascading ripple effect that spills over due to aircraft not being at their new destinations due to not flying-in the night before. It can take days to swap spit and get everything back on track, with pilots, flight crews, and jets.

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