The same thing happened with American at one point last winter and Delta in the middle of summer a few years back. It isn't just a southwest problem, it's an industry problem. When was the last time you flew and the plane wasn't packed full?
I last flew in October. Two domestic segments and two international segments. The flights were 2/3rds full at most.
If they’ve got to figure out where thousands of pilots are via a phone system that’s problematic and then get airplanes and pilots into some form of position that matches the schedule, I can see it being a week.Canceling all or most flights untill Jan 1 st doesn’t really make sense unless your instituting new systems and procedures.
I last flew in October. Two domestic segments and two international segments. The flights were 2/3rds full at most.
So my 2023 motto is going to be "more Baron, less b*xching". At the prices I've been seeing, even solo it will be about parity with the cost of fuel anyway, and I can sit wherever I want and my snacks are way better.
TMII can pee while seated in my own seat.
The old Midwest Express/Midwest Airlines is sorely missed.…I long for a high-cost carrier where I don't need to play monty hall to get a seat, a bag, and a snack for my $800 itinerary…
The old Midwest Express/Midwest Airlines is sorely missed.
Hell, the **old** damn near any airline is sorely missed. The best of them now suck compared to the worst of the 80s/90s, it seem like. Or at least the decent ones back then.The old Midwest Express/Midwest Airlines is sorely missed.
That was a GREAT airline. Real silverware, decent meal, linen napkins, great looking FA's (back when it wasn't politically incorrect to notice). Flew that a few times for business, we'll never see the likes of that again, at least domestically.
Unfortunately I can't say our system is newer than Southwest's. We are running out of people that know how to program it.
Sounds like the initial plot point of the recent Battlestar Galactica.Had to get something from the locked storeroom at Costco yesterday. System is running a DOS port on a Windows system....one of the managers said "ancient, but it still does what we need it to do!" all the while laughing at the technology.
If you bring Gatorade, for both the liquid and the wide mouth bottle….I can pee while seated in my own seat.
That description reminds me of Braniff 1 when my Dad was flying.That was a GREAT airline. Real silverware, decent meal, linen napkins, great looking FA's (back when it wasn't politically incorrect to notice). Flew that a few times for business, we'll never see the likes of that again, at least domestically.
That's one of those times when an autopilot becomes REALLY VALUABLE!I can pee while seated in my own seat.
SABRE is decades old…the original system was written in a language so ancient & obscure even I don’t remember it, and I love old programming languages to illustrate in class the evolution of software.Years ago I read that non-customer-facing software used by most airlines is old and rickety. Sounds like it still is.
I loved Braniff! And the original Continental. Wayback when. Braniff always made sure the Texas football team and band traveled on the orange aircraft. In return, the crews were guests of the band at the games.That description reminds me of Braniff 1 when my Dad was flying.
SABRE is decades old…the original system was written in a language so ancient & obscure even I don’t remember it, and I love old programming languages to illustrate in class the evolution of software.
https://www.sabre.com/about/
Abit of an update….if you look at job openings at SABRE, lots of C++, Linux, NoSQL ( but no indication of which one, and there are many), and so on. Really intriguing. And lots of APIs so other developers can build apps to use the various product lines.SABRE is decades old…the original system was written in a language so ancient & obscure even I don’t remember it, and I love old programming languages to illustrate in class the evolution of software.
https://www.sabre.com/about/
Exactly! Next meeting I'll just say "Southwest" when there's hesitancy in upgrading systems...Awesome. This is basically the use case that justifies my entire career field. Now I have another 15 second elevator speech for my back pocket.
Blame them or don't, but I don't think pilots who admittedly aren't willing to go the extra mile should complain about others gutting Herb's philosophy.
Not disagreeing with you or suggesting you shouldn't fly SWA, but your comment above is not a guarantee anymore.They'll be fine in the long run, they have way too many good employees to fail.
Exactly. There is some dark stuff going on behind the scenes at SWA. To be fair, most majors have had to deal with those kinds of issues. My point being SWA is nothing special anymore. They are just another major airline with major airline problems.But, before all this happened, I was told by a long time SW pilot that he used to be willing to go the extra mile (extend days, pick up extra trips, etc), but in the last 5 or so years the culture has gone from the "company takes care of employees so the employees take care of the company" to "anything you say or do can and will be used against you, so going above and beyond is just more opportunity for the company to single you out (via write-ups or the JAs cited earlier in this thread)".
NPR has aired a superb discussion with Casey Murray, president of SWA's pilots association, describing pilots' perspectives on the ongoing disaster.
Uh....translation please?
According to Wiki:SABRE is decades old…the original system was written in a language so ancient & obscure even I don’t remember it, and I love old programming languages to illustrate in class the evolution of software.
https://www.sabre.com/about/
Back when i was mulling entertaining a 121 transition, i found out about that little gem. At first i thought that was just regional airline fodder, Nope. Big airlines do it too. Thats a hard pass for me dawg. I didn't give up 20 years of literal life agency starting in my late 20 with .mil, just to eat another 10 of that guano in my 50s because "bUh SeNiOriTy".
Im just being generic with that comment btw. It is my understanding not all airlines contractually abuse their chatel like that. My workplace is plurality SWA, so im already well read on the tricks they pull on the regular in order to notch the JA, and thats before i bring up the civilian antagonizing angle (same month tactical mil-drop). Seems a bit unbecoming to feign fatigue in order to get out of that ludicrous contractual trap, but i guess thats why ill have to do something else in my 50s. Lord knows id quit a job i dont need for less, now that i think about it, i might make a great DEN swa ramper right about now too soon?