Folks calm down. The answer has already been provided above by some posters, but I'll translate for the military accession neophytes: Essentially this is just a euphemistic way of saying that the Service Component is streamlining standing height waivers.
That's it.
There's no changes to seat ergonomics, mix/max for ejection seats, planned retrofits to cockpits, nothing.
Why the fanfare you ask? Because that accelerates the
accession process, which is a big sticking point right now with the USAF and its current flavor of the year boner of cranking out
more pilots per year with
less training (and that topic deserves its own thread).
Would anyone care to note they have also changed the color deficiency requirements to a lower threshold two years ago? What threshold you ask? The one that used to be waiverable but not disqualifying. Gee what a coincidence. That's all this is folks. Now breathe into that brown paper bag, the demographic hegemony of his Majesty's Air Force will remain status quo for a while now, if that happens to be a cultural trigger for ya.
As to the crux of the matter being dealt with via these policy fiddles, it is absolutely a good thing in the aggregate in that it reduces the bureaucracy. AF/SG of course hates it, but that's medical
nonners for ya. Of course, they're making it up in spades due to Corona and waiver denials for the high experience O-4/O-5 crowd, since they have a seller's market with the [competitive wage] airline jobs not hiring to a significant degree for the next 3 years (the latter is my WAG). The VA record trolling discrimination antics has also been especially contemptuous, but that was a few dual-hatted airline folks ruining it for everybody else, and I digress on the topic of
Blue Falcons.
What does this mean down the line? Nothing fundamentally changes on the aircraft tracking post-UPT, which seems to be where people home-on-jammed to on this forum. In practice this means more women and men on the ergonomic outlier (as viewed from the Caucasian male baseline) can go right through to training without the previously required SG shenanigans aka protracted waiver process. This further means more bang for the taxpayer, as these students won't have to wait years and come out of FTU as dang near slicked winged Captains (payroll and benefits) before being of any value to the Service Component, unless you're taking the scenic route to training (aka NAVY/USMC pipeline...i keed i keed, sorta). And yes, statistically that will benefit women since they have a larger proportion of candidates that normally fell in the waiver range.
But it means zilch on the ability to track a particular airplane "you wanted" when you signed the dotted line, that you couldn't get before the waiver went away. Talking about fighter cockpits specifically is even more of a cart before the horse business. No changes to the fleet are planned. In practice the majority of these outliers will go to crew aircraft. There's relevant samples of females in fighter cockpits today, again nothing fundamentally will change about that distribution either.