I was at Dulles airport, May 25, 1972, along with thousands of other interested people, for a Travel related exposition, Transpo 72.
"On May 25, 1972, veteran test pilots Anthony LeVier and Charles Hall transported 115 crew members, employees, and reporters on a 4-hour, 13- minute flight from Palmdale, California, to Dulles Airport outside Washington, D.C., with the TriStar’s AFCS feature engaged from takeoff roll to landing. It was a groundbreaking moment: the first cross-country flight without the need for human hands on the controls. Fly-by-wire technology was here to stay." source: Lockheed Martin.
The Lockheed Tristar had serious, external events that crippled the company, such as the bankruptcy of Rolls Royce, the manufacturer of the only engine that would fit the central tail mounted engine housing.
The humans monitoring taxied to the runway, lined up, and pushed the 'Go' button, and the plane departed per a SID, joined the low, then hi altitude air routes, flew to the east, descended into the arrival routing, and landed. The Captain pushed the stop button, and taxied to the desired location on the ramp. Obviously, the FAA fully co operated in this flight plan, filed for the whole flight, no changes.
The state of the art mostly electro mechanical analog computers were very primitive compared to those we have today, but were capable of very high quality control of the control surfaces from outputs of the gyro's and navigation radio's. The digital matrixes properly coordinated such tasks as raising and lowering the landing gear. A combination controlled thrust and braking.
The Douglas DC 10 was old state of the art, came to market sooner, and cost much less, except on fuel efficiency. Fuel was much cheaper in those days.
Part of the Lockheed problem could have been the lack of skilled maintenance personnel to keep that equipment at top performance. I have had training in that field, in power plants that produce 250,000,000 watts from a single generator, we held out put voltage to less than 0.1 volt from the setting, hour after hour, untouched by the operators. Combustion air fuel balance was held to less than 1% oxygen, and no CO2 from the stack, while burning a train car load of coal per hour. All that was the result of tightly maintained analog computers, in the 1960's.
I think that aterpster has flown the Tristar, but the auto takeoff and auto land were not active on the planes he flew.
Airbus has heavily transferred the equipment failure response into their computer, there are many fewer switches and valves that the pilot can use for control of systems, and with the installation of local precision augmented GPS, plus locally updated taxi diagrams, auto taxi should be simple, relative to a few years ago.
John Deere uses that kind of augmented GPS to steer their tractors with such precision that the planter runs within 3 INCHES of the cultivator cuts. The farmer plots the edges of the field by driving around it, and sets the row and seed spacing, the John Deere does the rest, monitored by the farmer in the airconditioned cab, studying for his remote college course.
Today, the problem as I see it is that the FAA ATC must have a fully automated route and altitude control set up for the whole trip, in advance, and then adjust the clearance into the flight control computer, with the approval of the "Pilot monitoring", as the plane advances through the system. Unless another plane fails to comply with the clearance they received on the ground, no adjustments would be needed. Only the high volume airports would be likely to have much adjustments, but a missed approach would there cause a lot of "Recalculating"!
If the pilot died, no problem, the plane simply flies as now if communication is lost, per the last clearance received AND ACKNOWLEDGED. Other enroute planes would be route adjusted to keep that route available until the plane and dead pilot reaches the destination.
Perhaps the head cabin attendant would be equipped with a cockpit key, and would be advised to check on the unresponsive pilot? We do need to take care of Plan B!
This concept would be based on algorithms similar to email routing, with shortest route as the prime concern, and weather avoidance a close second. The airline's requested route and altitude would be the starting point, as they would have done a weather adjusted route, and altitude optimized for fuel burn.
Note that AI is not in this concept.