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Air traffic control system crashes again

me101   on 11 April 2002 - 03:26 · 4 comments & 96 views

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Thousands of travellers were delayed in the UK this morning after a key air traffic control system failed for the second time in two weeks.

The Flight Data Processing System (FDPS) at the West Drayton centre went down at 6am. Although it was up and running by 6.40am, air traffic control was expected to run at 70 per cent of capacity until 10am.

The system prints the paper strips that controllers use to plot the movements of planes. When the system fails the strips have to be written out manually. The same system failed two weeks ago for 20 minutes, causing similar delays.

Although the hardware for the FDPS was upgraded from an IBM 4381 to an IBM 0/S390 in Autumn last year, the application still contains some code created in the 1970s.

National Air Traffic Services, which runs air traffic control, said that there are software upgrades to the system around once a month.

News source: vnunet


The endorsement by the world's largest software maker could prove important in determining a winner in a long-running standards battle for DVD burners. Many hardware manufacturers find it easier and cheaper to build PCs that follow such specifications rather than risk breaking from the pack and supporting a technology that withers.

"Microsoft's support of a format could precipitate a quicker adoption of a standard," said Mary Craig, an analyst at research firm Gartner. It "would almost ensure the success of the DVD+RW format potentially being the standard for PCs."

Many manufacturers are bundling DVD burners into high-end PCs, such as the top-of-the-line iMac, that write data in one of two formats: DVD+RW and DVD-RW. The drives can also be added to PCs for about US$500.

However, analysts say confusion over DVD compatibility remains an obstacle to expanding sales.

Hewlett-Packard, Dell Computer and others have already chosen the DVD+RW standard (along with the complementary DVD+R standard). But Apple Computer, Compaq Computer and several Asian manufacturers have championed DVD-RW, DVD-R and DVD-RAM.

As a result, consumers who burn DVD+RW discs on Dell machines, for example, cannot access the data on Compaq PCs with DVD-RW drives, and vice versa.

While Microsoft's endorsement seems to give a boost to the DVD+RW camp, the group pushing for the competing standard pointed out that the software company's blessing does not guarantee a victor. Microsoft supports a third technology, DVD-RAM, within the Windows operating system, but that support has done little to raise the profile of the DVD-RAM format, which remains a distant third in terms of consumer popularity. DVD-RAM is typically used to store data rather than video.

"The OS has to be format-agnostic. Ultimately, Microsoft can't dictate what consumers are going to use, and this is just Microsoft adding support for another format," said DVD Forum spokesman Andy Marken.

The DVD Forum, which supports DVD-RW, is not working with Microsoft to develop that format in the operating system, Marken added. "It's up to the individual (PC) companies to work on that."

Marken said the DVD Forum's stance is that adding support for other formats, such as DVD-R and DVD-RW, into Windows would only add to consumer confusion. "DVD-RAM does everything the floppy disk does, so there is no need to support other formats," he said.

In addition, there are third-party software developers, such as Software Architects, Roxio, Nero and Veritas Software, working on software to enable OS support of both DVD-rewritable formats.

A representative from the DVD+RW Alliance, the group backing the competing standard, declined to comment.

Still, Microsoft's stamp of approval is not trivial. For example, the company made a similar effort with CD technology, according to Greg DeMichillie, analyst with research firm Directions on Microsoft. While the move wasn't the sole catalyst to push CD technology into the mainstream, DeMichillie said, it did make the devices easier to use.

"It makes sense to integrate DVD-recording software to the OS; Microsoft did the same thing with CD technology," DeMichillie said.

Microsoft representatives were somewhat cryptic about the company's plans.

"Microsoft continues to evaluate ways to improve the CD and DVD reading and writing experiences in Windows, and believes that the best experience for the PC user would be a more versatile and familiar 'floppy-like' behaviour, such as that offered by Mt. Rainier technologies incorporated by the DVD+RW media format," Microsoft spokeswoman Laura Wooster wrote in an e-mail.

Mount Rainier was formed by companies including Compaq, Philips Electronics, Sony and Microsoft to enable OS support of data storage on rewritable storage technologies. The group started its efforts in tying CD-rewritable technology to an OS and later finalised the Mount Rainier spec for DVD+RW, which set the format up for inclusion into Windows.

Microsoft's support for the DVD+RW format began in March, when Mount Rainier finalized a specification for DVD+RW.

However, the company has left the door open, if just a crack, for others formats, including DVD-RW.

"Windows will continue to support third-party solutions for reading and writing multiple formats, and will continue to evaluate native support of other media formats," Wooster wrote.

Microsoft representatives did not return calls for further comment.

Microsoft's motivation
Home DVD players are one of the fastest-selling consumer-electronics products, and the PC industry hopes to tap that demand to drive computer sales, DeMichillie said. PC sales have slowed in the past couple of years, and video editing requires more horsepower from PCs, which could motivate consumers to upgrade.

"Video editing and moviemaking addresses the problem that people aren't upgrading their PCs enough," DeMichillie said.

Microsoft's support of the DVD+RW format is not necessarily surprising considering that Dell and HP are members of the DVD+RW Alliance, said John Freeman, an analyst with market research firm Strategic Marketing Decisions. An HP general manager, John Spofford, even chairs the group.

HP has been one of the most active companies in promoting the DVD+RW format and was the first company to begin selling a DVD+RW drive.

But PCs with drives based on the DVD-RW format actually came into the market first, ushered in by Apple and Compaq.

Microsoft has been making other efforts to get into the DVD recording market. Earlier this year, the company licensed technology used to create DVD movies from Sonic Solutions, a supplier of digital authoring systems.

While the standards battle wages on, manufacturers such as Sony are playing both sides.

While Sony is selling the DVD+RW drives and is a member of the DVD+RW Alliance, it continues to support DVD-RW through its membership in the DVD Forum. It also sells and manufactures DVD-RW discs.

Sony representatives have in the past said that the success of one format does not necessarily mean the failure of another.


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