Make you a deal ... teach me how to do the new fixed license application and I'll do it for free to any EAA member AND I'll write it up as a Kitplanes article so my colleagues can do it legally.
I can do you one better. There’s an FAA doc on how to apply for the FCC license (after you have FAA frequency coordination approval first) for air shows. You can probably find it with Google or I can link it. It’s an AF license. Even FAA realized the FCC site is impossible to navigate for anyone doing an airshow.
So, it has step by step instructions for everything in the Java app you have to use that is linked to from inside ULS.
You won’t be able to get the Java app to load without a ten year old copy of Java.
That’s where my friend got stopped years ago and called me. I figured out how to get an ancient Java version on to an even more ancient laptop who’s only job each year is to be pulled out the closet and fill out his AF application.
It’s not the instructions that are hard to come by.
It’s the idiot coder who wrote the Java app who didn’t say “greater than” instead of “equals to” in his app checking to see what version of Java it’s running under.
And yes. I wrote this problem up in a letter explaining that it was a simple fix for any Java coder and to please pass the information I gathered troubleshooting it along to the software team for the App. That was five years ago.
I figure even with government stupidity it should have made its way to someone clueful’s desk by now.
I even detailed the exact clickpath to the error and an explanation of how to fix it.
All the stupid Java app even does is fill out a form. It could be replaced with a native web app in about an hour worth of work by any decent web coder.
I even tried to move this into a VM. Oracle no longer has the absolutely dead version of Java needed available for download, even on their “archived versions” site.
FCC simply needs to update their form generator app and bring it into the modern world. You know why they probably haven’t? “Metrics”. The call center doesn’t get enough complaints about that part of the website because the number of AF station licenses applied for is nearly zero.
Meanwhile, IF it worked... you need a letter of coordination from the local FSDO who kicks it to the regional FAA frequency coordinator, before you can apply to the FCC. That’s hoop number one. Takes a month to a couple of months usually each year, for an airshow.
For mom and pop to apply for a fixed license to call mom and say you picked up donuts? I doubt FAA regional will approve it very quickly if at all. But someone could get lucky. It needs to have a “safety” purpose.