SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 10
Downloaden Sie, um offline zu lesen
White Paper: Flatirons Solutions, Rusada, AirWorks Case Study: SFS Aviation
Vendor Job Card: AV-BASE Systems PLUS… How I see IT, News, Upcoming and Past Webinars, MRO Software Directory
V3.2 • MAY/JUNE 2014
MRO DATA IS COMING
Realizing the value of information
KEEPING MRO IT LEAN
Improving the function that improves the business
MOBILITY DEEP DIVE
The future for Aerospace Mobility
Editor’s comment
Data is the catalyst that turns experience into value but it’s powerful
stuff and must be properly handled to do any good.
If you lived in Europe during the 1980s, you will have become familiar with food mountains
and wine lakes. But don’t be deceived, these were not good things; they were the result of
a Common Agricultural Policy that, in its drive to ensure food security, ended up generating
more food than Europe could consume… or sell or give away without damaging markets.
Aviation IT faces a similar challenge today.
Data volumes are growing exponentially with, not only traditional IT systems harvesting
and generating data in increasing volumes but also Aircraft themselves starting to
generate data on every aspect of their function before, during and after each flight. As
with European food and wine, the basic idea has worked well, there’s lots of data: the
challenge is what to do with the mountains of information, how to apply them to the
useful purposes we had in mind when the harvesting and generating capabilities were
first mooted. The organization, integration and application of data for business process
improvement are our themes for the issue.
We look at Data Warehousing, how it works, and how it can be used to drive better business through better
information and reports. Mobility is a key component in the drive to leverage data as a business advantage and so
our article on mobility, where it is going and how it can be used will tick a lot of boxes. And, looking to the wider
context, if IT is used to improve other processes in the business, what about making sure that IT itself is lean? We have
an article addressing that. Also, we always like to see how all of this works in the real world and so the case study on a
new MRO solution for a helicopter operator will be of great interest.
As always, you’ll learn how Michael Denis sees IT and be able to take a broader view of the news and information
that matters in your sector.
And Aircraft IT live demonstration webinars let readers research the software market from the convenience of their
own desk to find a package that could meet their needs by accessing past webinars with more focus than ever while,
of course, future webinars are a valuable resource available to every reader who registers.
Data volumes and quality will continue to grow, systems become more capable and delivery more convenient.
Whatever the developments, Aircraft IT MRO will continue to bring the best ideas to your desktop or tablet screen with
every issue.
Aircraft IT MRO: organizing information about your world for you.
Ed Haskey
04	NEWS
With an increasing variety of operating profiles, Aircraft MRO IT has to adapt to meet a growing range of demands.
MRO IT managers can follow developments on http://www.aircraftit.com/MRO/Index.aspx and here in the Aircraft IT
MRO e-journal.
18	 CASE STUDY: FACING UP TO THE CHALLENGE OF OFFSHORE HELICOPTER OPERATIONS
Brian P. McDonald, Director Asian Aviation Services (AAR); Management Consultant, SFS Aviation Co., Ltd.
When SFS Aviation was seeking a software solution, they needed one that could address all of their needs and
challenges throughout the business.
21	 VENDOR JOB CARD
ThedevelopmentpathandtechnologyinnovationsthathavebroughtAV-BASESystemstoitspresentsuccess.
In this Job Card, Bert Vergeer, Vice President, Sales and Marketing at AV-BASE Systems, Inc. explains AV-BASE, its IT
philosophy and its achievements.
22	 UPCOMING LIVE MRO SOFTWARE DEMONSTRATION WEBINAR
A preview of the live MRO software demonstration webinar featuring AviIT, on 8th May 2014.
24	 WHITE PAPER: MOBILITY DEEP DIVE
Paul Saunders, Global Product Manager, Flatirons Solutions
Mobility is the single word that encapsulates a host of IT issues from getting content to where people can use it to
the Internet of things, identity and machine learning.
28	 WHITE PAPER: LOST IN TRANSLATION?
Tim Alden, Commercial Director, Rusada
Warehouses ensure that variable inputs feed stable outputs. A data warehouse can ensure that multiple sources of
data feed useful reports determined by need.
31	 COLUMN: HOW I SEE IT
Michael Denis asks; In the age of Netflix and GoGo, why isn’t aircraft data real?
More than 40 years ago we’d put a man on the Moon after just a 10 year program. Why then, today, is it still difficult
to integrate data from different systems?
32	 PAST WEBINARS: KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER AND ACCESS FOR INDUSTRY EXPERTS
View Video Recordings of our Past Live MRO Software Demonstration Webinars. See full information and view video
recordings of past MRO Software demonstrations, including: ADSoftware, Volartec and IDMR Solutions.
34 	 WHITE PAPER: ALSO A BUSINESS PROCESS
Ravinder Pal Singh (Ravi), CTO and CIO, Air Works
While IT is the driver of leaner processes in other parts of the business, it should also operate as integral to the
business, seeking to make its own processes lean.
38	 EVENT PREVIEW: AIRLINE & AEROSPACE MRO AND OPERATIONS IT CONFERENCE
43	 MRO SOFTWARE DIRECTORY
A detailed look at the world’s leading MRO IT systems.
CLICK HERE: Send your feedback and
suggestions to AircraftIT MRO
CLICK HERE: Subscribe for freeAircraftIT MRO is published bi-monthly and is an affiliate of Aircraft Commerce
and part of the AviationNextGen Ltd group. The entire contents within this
publication © Copyright 2014 AviationNextGen Ltd an independent publication
and not affiliated with any of the IT vendors or suppliers. Content may not be
reproduced without the strict written agreement of the publisher.
The views and opinions expressed in this publication are the views of the
authors and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of their companies
or of the publisher. The publisher does not guarantee the source, originality,
accuracy, completeness or reliability of any statement, information, data, finding,
interpretation, advice, opinion, or view presented.
AircraftIT MRO
	 Publisher/Editor:	 Ed Haskey
	 E-mail:	 ed.haskey@aircraftit.com
	 Telephone:	 +44 1273 454 235
	 Website:	 www.aircraftIT.com
	Copy Editor/Contributor:	 John Hancock
	 E-mail:	 john@aircraftit.com
	 Magazine Production:	 Dean Cook
	 E-mail:	 deancook@magazineproduction.com
8 | NEWS | AIRCRAFT IT MRO | MAY/JUNE 2014
ENGINEERING HOLDING, RUSSIA’S LARGEST DOMESTIC MRO
PROVIDER, CHOOSE AERDATA’S STREAM DIGITAL AIRCRAFT
RECORDS SOFTWARE
IN mid-February 2014, AerData, provider of software and services for the
aviation industry, announced that Engineering Holding, Russia’s largest
domestic MRO provider, is to acquire STREAM aircraft records software.
STREAM (Secure Technical Records for Electronic Asset Management) is a web-
based solution used by some of the world’s largest airlines, lessors and MROs
to manage aircraft and engine records.
Commenting on the announcement, Mark Nieuwendijk, Managing Director of
AerData said; “AerData have been working closely with Engineering Holding’s
team to take full advantage of the benefits that STREAM can bring. It’s also
our first customer in the rapidly expanding Russian airline and MRO market to
implement the global standard in aircraft records on the STREAM platform.”
Marat Tereshenko, General Director of S7 Engineering said; “We wish to
adopt a global standard for managing records within our MRO customers.
STREAM will integrate with our MRO IT system allowing full transparency on
closed maintenance work, thereby increasing our quality and efficiency as we
continue to grow our fleet and third party maintenance activity.” He added; “We
are pleased to be making this announcement with AerData, a company that
has a history of supporting successful large scale implementations with major
airlines.”
AERDATA’S IRISH OFFICE MOVES TO NEW LOCATION
AT the same time, mid-February 2014, AerData announced the relocation of its
Irish-based office to a new site in Dun Laoghaire, South County Dublin.
Commenting on the announcement, Godfrey Ryan, Director Marketing and
Sales, AerData said; “We established AerData’s presence in Ireland in 2011
and have grown the office to such an extent that a new location was needed
to house the expanding team and provide a convenient location to host
customers from Ireland and abroad.” He continued; “The high specification
office is adjacent to Dun Laoghaire railway (DART) station which provides
convenient connections to the city center, just a 20 minute journey away,
and transport links nationwide make [the new office] easily accessible from
anywhere in the Emerald Isle.”
CROATIA AIRLINES CHOOSES AERDATA’S STREAM DIGITAL
AIRCRAFT RECORDS SOFTWARE
IN late February 2014, AerData announced Croatian flag carrier, Croatia Airlines,
as the latest airline to acquire STREAM aircraft records software.
Commenting on the announcement, Mark Nieuwendijk, Managing Director
of AerData said; “Croatia Airlines is another great example of a company that
will adopt STREAM for its own fleet and for its third-party maintenance work.
The wide-ranging benefits for both applications are proven. We look forward to
supporting Croatia Airlines for many years to come.”
Davor Bujan, Engineering and Technical Support Manager, Croatia Airlines
said; “STREAM consists of an easy to use and fully functional records
management system that can integrate with our maintenance planning system.
Our business is about fulfilling the requirements of customers both inside
and outside the company, day to day and at major events like lease return or
heavy maintenance work for other airlines. STREAM will go a long way towards
satisfying those objectives.”
AERDATA ANNOUNCES ‘REPAIR MAP’ MODULE FOR STREAM
STILL in late February
2014, AerData also
announced the launch
of Repair Map, a new
structural repair and
damage management
tool in its STREAM
aircraft records
software. To bring this
about and to deliver a
superior functionality to
STREAM, AerData have
exclusively partnered with the product developers of Repair Map, German-
based Soft Aviation.
Commenting on the announcement, Mark Nieuwendijk, Managing Director
of AerData said; “The management of repairs and damages is reliant on data,
specifically the records that identify the damage and then support the repair.
We have integrated this new tool to enable airlines to centrally manage their
repair files, including all the supporting documentation linked from STREAM
along with a smart graphical interface.”
Wolfgang Kliem, Managing Director of Soft Aviation said; “STREAM is a
fully functional records management system that now can be the basis for an
airline’s repairs and damages repository. The Repair Map feature can support
direct linking with the documentation in STREAM but we have also enabled
its ability to integrate with the airline’s MRO IT system to have a seamless link
between ‘live’ damages and repairs and STREAM. This will allow airlines to
provide third parties with real-time access to repair information on demand.”
AERDATA LAUNCHES ‘GEARS’ AIRCRAFT
INSPECTION AND AUDIT SOFTWARE
MOVING to early March 2014, AerData announced the launch of GEARS, a
new software tool, designed to standardize data collection for routine audits
and inspections. GEARS (Global Electronic Asset Review System), is a digital
tool that can control the quality, consistency and efficiency of data collection
by utilizing standard procedures and guidelines. The assigned ‘inspector’
completes a series of pre-defined questions and at the end, based on the
answers, multiple reports can be generated and shared.
Commenting on the announcement, Vincent van der Gulik, Director, Products
and Services, AerData said; “GEARS was developed to address the problem
of gathering data in a standardized way for routine audits and inspections.
Lessors can deploy their standard audit template in GEARS for technical reps to
complete and be sure that the data they collect is the right data, collected in a
standardized format. For airlines, the principal is the same. When an airline has
Quality Reviews to carry out, they too may utilize GEARS to efficiently manage
the data collection and distribution.” He continued; “GEARS is designed to
integrate across the AerData product platform, most notably CMS and STREAM.
This means that customers who use one or both of these products realize the
benefits of automated data transfer from GEARS to CMS as well as document
linking from STREAM. This will improve the quality of data entry and reduce the
costs and risks normally associated with manual data entry.”
GEARS is offered as a stand-alone tool via AerData’s web browser-based
Dashboard or integrated with CMS and STREAM if the customer is also
subscribing to those AerData products. In addition, AerData can also offer
GEARS through AerData Technical Services (ADTS) if customers wish to
outsource audits and inspection work
MCAP CHOOSE AERDATA’S CMS AND STREAM
SOFTWARE PACKAGES
STILL in early March 2014, AerData announced that MC Aviation Partners
Inc. (MCAP), the commercial aircraft lessor, has chosen AerData’s CMS and
STREAM software. CMS (Corporate Management System) is a lease and asset
management solution used by the majority of the world’s aircraft, helicopter
and engine leasing organizations.
Commenting on the announcement, Mark Nieuwendijk, Managing Director
of AerData said; “We are delighted to announce that MCAP has selected our
services. In the process, MCAP will migrate from their legacy lease management
platform to the CMS market standard. In addition, they become another major
lessor to standardize its records management with STREAM.”
Hiroshi Nakanishi, CEO of MCAP said; “We sought to substantially improve
our operating model and key to this was the selection of an appropriate suite
of dedicated aircraft leasing tools in CMS and STREAM.” He continued; “The
functionality opportunities of both solutions, already proven within the industry
and the experience of AerData in migrating data from other systems were the
primary requirements for us. However, of equal importance was the partnership
approach of AerData in this project.”
SMBC AVIATION CAPITAL CHOOSE AERDATA’S
STREAM AND GEARS SOFTWARE
BY mid-March 2014, AerData was able to announce that SMBC Aviation Capital
(SMBC AC), has licensed STREAM aircraft records software and GEARS asset
review system. GEARS (Global Electronic Asset Review System), is a total asset
review management tool designed with in-field experience and IT to ensure
quality, consistency and efficiency in any asset review.
Commenting on the announcement, Mark Nieuwendijk, Managing Director
of AerData said; “We are delighted to announce that another major lessor has
chosen STREAM for the management of its technical documents. It is also a
pleasure to see that SMBC AC has chosen GEARS, a product it has been trialing
since late last year. GEARS will deliver SMBC AC standardized data collection
and reporting across its inspection and audit program in an efficient manner.”
Diarmuid Healy, Head of Technical Asset Management, SMBC Aviation Capital
AerData progresses on all fronts plus moves to a new office in Ireland
Image supplied with kind permission from Soft Aviation
MAY/JUNE 2014 | AIRCRAFT IT MRO | NEWS | 9
CLICK HERE FOR FULL SOFTWARE DETAILS AND FOR A DEMO
said; “We are pleased to announce our new working
relationship with AerData through the use of their STREAM
and GEARS systems. These systems will help to streamline
processes in our business and assist our ambitious growth
plans over the coming years.”
WAYPOINT LEASING CHOOSE AERDATA’S
CMS AND STREAM SOFTWARE PACKAGES
STILL in mid-March 2014, it was announced that
Waypoint Leasing, a leading global helicopter leasing
company, has chosen AerData to support its leasing
and records management as it grows its customer base,
takes delivery of new aircraft and expands its business.
CMS (Corporate Management System) is a lease and
asset management solution used by the majority of
the world’s aircraft, helicopter and engine leasing
organizations.
Commenting on the announcement, Mark Nieuwendijk,
Managing Director of AerData, said; “Waypoint is our
ideal partner – it is a pioneer in the helicopter leasing
industry, dedicated to forming long-term partnerships
with operators and sees the value of our services. We are
delighted they have chosen two of our core systems, CMS
and STREAM, to support their ongoing operations and
growth of their business.”
David Gorsky, Vice President Operations and Technical,
Waypoint Leasing, said, “As a large helicopter leasing
company with customers and aircraft all around the world,
we regularly invest in infrastructure systems that support
our activities and the continuing growth of our business.
The powerful combination of both of AerData’s solutions,
already proven with major lessors and airlines, met our
rigorous requirements. We look forward to building our
relationship with AerData and leveraging their expertise
for the benefit of our customers.”
MINSHENG FINANCIAL LEASING CO. CHOOSE
AERDATA’S CMS LEASE MANAGEMENT
SOFTWARE
IN early April 2014, it was announced that Chinese based
financial leasing company, Minsheng Financial Leasing Co.,
Ltd (MSFL) has chosen AerData’s CMS software.
Commenting on the announcement, Paul van Tol,
Managing Director of AerData said; “We are delighted to
announce another new customer for CMS, this time from
the rapidly expanding Chinese leasing industry. MSFL
are already a well-established and recognized name in
the Asian market and CMS will assist them expand their
activities using an industry standard lease and asset
management platform.”
Zhang Bo, Vice President and Director of Aircraft Leasing
Division, MSFL said; “We wanted a straightforward
and reliable solution to manage our aircraft leases.” He
continued; “AerData was a name recommended to us as
the market leader in this area so it was a natural decision
to assess the capabilities of CMS, AerData’s IT infrastructure
and support. We look forward to growing our portfolio
utilizing this solution.”
Flatirons Solutions Enters
Into Exclusive Support Agreement
with EMC for Docato
REINFORCES EXPERTISE IN XML-BASED CONTENT LIFECYCLE MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS
FLATIRONS Solutions announced in late February 2014 that it has entered into an exclusive agreement with EMC
Corporation (EMC) to support and sell the EMC Docato Component Services solution. The agreement includes providing
support for existing Docato customers as well as sales and support for new Docato licenses, reflecting Flatirons
Solutions’ expertise in XML-based content lifecycle management solutions for aerospace, automotive, electronics,
financial services, government, healthcare, and publishing industries.
The Docato Component Services solution was part of EMC’s 2007 acquisition of Netherlands-based XHive, which
included the XDB database and was integrated into EMC’s Information Intelligence Group (IIG). At that time, EMC notified
XHive’s Docato customers that it would end of life the Docato system in 2014. Flatirons Solutions had previously licensed
the Docato source code from EMC and uses the XDB/Docato stack in the structured content lifecycle management
solutions it provides to its aviation and aerospace customers.
“EMC IIG performed a considerable amount of due diligence and has selected Flatirons Solutions, a long-term EMC
partner, to continue to support existing Docato licenses and to sell and support new licenses,” said Barry Ruditsky, vice
president of OEM sales for EMC’s IIG. “Flatirons Solutions has helped many EMC IIG customers develop solutions for their
organizations using Docato. This expertise and Flatirons Solutions’ active customer base using the XDB/Docato stack in
production environments afford them a unique position to carry the technology forward.”
“The agreement to support EMC’s current Docato customers and carry the Docato platform forward is a reflection of
our continued partnership with EMC,” said JD Sillion, chief solutions officer for Flatirons Solutions. “Flatirons Solutions
brings more than two decades of content lifecycle management experience to EMC’s Docato customers, a strong
foundation upon which we will continue to support and evolve the platform to meet customers’ unique business
requirements.”
24 | WHITE PAPER: FLATIRONS | AIRCRAFT IT MRO | MAY/JUNE 2014
Mobility
deep dive
Mobility is the big thing today but,
asks Paul Saunders, Global Product
Manager at Flatirons Solutions,
where will it go next: what is the
current and future state of mobility
in aerospace and what about
wearable technology?
MAY/JUNE 2014 | AIRCRAFT IT MRO | WHITE PAPER: FLATIRONS | 25
THE OTHER DAY my five year old daughter asked me ‘what shape
is the Internet: what does it look like?’ I thought for a minute then
turned the question back to ask her what shape did she think it is? She felt
it would probably be a rectangle (after all, screens are rectangular). It was a
good answer but I want to demonstrate in this article that it’s not
rectangular but is rather the shape of an engine or an ECU; or it might be
an IFE screen or a wrist-worn activity tracker or a watch. Whatever it is, we
need to look outside of the rectangle, beyond what we already know, to
mobility and where mobility is going for us.
BRENDA
Let’s start with an example that is well outside of what we do. My
mother in law, Brenda, is the grandmother of my children and the worst
technophobe. She’s also a writer who has written books which she sells
on Amazon plus she does talks… and she decided she needed a website.
Instinct suggests that if a family member asks you to build a website, run
a mile: it must be like the worst client ever. But actually this turned out to
be interesting because Brenda had a really good understanding of what she
needed. When we sat down to work out what she needed, she said that
it should be a responsive website. I thought that was incredible; a woman
who’s a technophobe asking about responsive websites. But she’d thought
about it; she understood her audience. Her readers were buying her books
and reading them on a Kindle, so her website had to be designed first to
work on a Kindle before laptop or tablet formats. But I found it instructive
that a grandmother can make IT decisions based on what her users need?
WEBSITE PAGES
It got me thinking that there are a lot of airlines who, over the last couple
of years have done a really good job providing their passengers with what
they need in terms of mobility. Most airlines will have a mobile site and
will probably have an app that does a good job catering to their consumers
from that point of view; but how many have the tools — their portal, their
infrastructure, their intranets — where their own internal consumers, their
workers who are also mobile, have the same access to a responsive site?
WHAT’S CHANGED?
In the past couple of years, a lot has changed with technology: we’ve now
got a completely different paradigm. With Kindles and iPads, they say that
when you go on a train or a plane, whereas people used to talk with each
other, they’re now buried in their content. I don’t think that’s completely
true as this has always been the case; but the media for content has
changed from paper to screen.
“…we’ve got a completely different set of expectations
about how information is managed, we expect it to
be delivered anytime, anywhere on any device and we
expect to do it cheaper, faster and better.”
CLICK HERE FOR FULL SOFTWARE DETAILS AND FOR A DEMO
26 | WHITE PAPER: FLATIRONS | AIRCRAFT IT MRO | MAY/JUNE 2014
THE FUTURE
A look at the future of mobility shows trends and mega
trends which, for the purposes of this article, are what I
say are mega trends?
MEGA TREND #1
TECHNOLOGY DRIVEN NETWORKS AND THE
INTERNET OF THINGS
The first one is really two trends linked together:
technology driven networks and the Internet of things.
Traditionally the Internet is built up of data entered by
humans, i.e. if you flew a sector, you’d write a techlog,
sign it off and it would get faxed back to base. Now
we have eTechlogs; again manually driven but there’s
also engine condition monitoring and other automated
functions. Remember what I said earlier, the Internet is
no longer ‘rectangular’ but it’s the shape of components.
Technology driven networks are the opposite of
bureaucratic hierarchies. Whereas we used to pick up
paper documents to find out where we were and where
to go, we now simply tap into one of many technology
driven networks to find hotels, restaurants, places to
go… anything: going beyond where we would normally
have gone to find information.
This is going to be big in our industry. Even today, if
a programmer wants to find out about a particular line
of code, they Google it: they don’t read the manual.
This is how things work today; this is how the Internet
works: everybody Googles stuff. We don’t do that in
our industry if something goes wrong with our aircraft
we go and phone technical services and, if they don’t
know, they’ll read the manual; and if that doesn’t know
they’ll phone the OEM and two days later you might
get an answer back while, all the time, the aircraft’s
been grounded. But people are starting to work around
that; Skyping colleagues and so on.
We’re going to embrace mobility and the Internet of
things and use technology driven networks to help us
do that. I don’t know what it will finally look like but
that’s what’s going to happen.
MEGA TREND #2
IDENTITY
Identity is a big issue, and there are two things to
consider…
Identity is a really precious commodity and people
don’t take very good care of other people’s identity on
the Internet, e.g. NSA, GCHQ. But we’re going to start
taking seriously what happens to our own identity on
line so we need to think about how identity is used
for employees and the implications of that because in
the same way that advertisers can target you on the
Internet and can have cookies saved that help them
target you in advertising and things like that, we’re
going to want to do the same with employees in terms
of things like time booking, rostering, pairing.
The other thing we’re going to see a lot more of is
CREATE, DELIVER, CONSUME
Back in the day, we had paper systems to create, deliver
and consume content; and the aim was to deliver the
right information at the right time to the right people.
Whether it’s about producing manuals, getting them
to the pilots by whatever means of delivery was used,
getting them to hubs, engineers or getting training
material; it’s always been about creating the right
content and delivering it to the right people to consume
in the way they want to.
In today’s mobile age, the consumer age, we’ve got
a completely different set of expectations about how
information is managed, we expect it to be delivered
anytime, anywhere on any device and we expect to do it
cheaper, faster and better. That’s how the paradigm shift
has manifested.
HARDWARE
Let’s look at what’s going on with hardware. Remember
the mantra! ‘If you want it bad: iPad. If you’re happy
to wait: Windows 8.’ I first wrote this about two years
ago (see Aircraft IT volume 1, issue 6 September 2012)
and it was the case then that the iPad had the software;
the likes of Jeppesen and Lido were early adopters and
there was a whole pile of other applications coming out
for iPad at the time. On the horizon we had Windows
8, seen as the silver bullet that would allow us to do
everything, everywhere on every device… everything
that we had always wanted. Well, the situation still is, I
believe, ‘If you want it bad: iPad. If you’re happy to wait:
Windows 8.’ We’ve got a lot of choice with iPad and not
quite so much choice with Windows 8 but there have
been announcements from the likes of Delta and some
other airlines that they’re looking at Windows 8. It seems
that, if you’re running a project or you’re a pilot or an
engineer, and you’re leading that project, you’ll probably
go for the sexy consumer product, the iPad. If you’re
in IT and you’re used to dealing with legacy enterprise
systems like Active Directory, Citrix and all the stuff that
users hate, you’ll probably choose Windows.
Whatever you want to do and however you want to
do it, it’s all about the use case. People ask whether they
should have Windows or iPad or Android and it’s never
an easy answer because it’s always about the use case.
There’s a lot of interesting technology on the market
now. Samsung with Android have every kind of form
factor from under 2” for the Smart Gear watch through
7 inch and 10 inch tablets, right up to 20” monster
devices. In Europe, Panasonic have done really well
in the last year or so with a couple of big airline sales
where people have chosen the 10” or 7” Toughpad but
while I can see the appeal of these expensive ruggedized
devices, I’m not sure of the need for them. The data
on attrition rates, even for iPads, are really low because
if you give employees something they enjoy using
and allow them to put personal content on as well as
company stuff, they’re going to take good care of it.
THE iPAD IS A MACGUFFIN
As well as being all about the use case, it doesn’t matter
what device you have because introducing the iPad
changed this small sector of aerospace IT in a way
nobody would have expected five years ago. This new
device wasn’t what the sector was about but it was a
plot device, a way to allow us to embrace consumerism,
to embrace sexy user experiences and user interfaces
and to embrace mobility with all those good things that
users want. It wasn’t about going to the Apple Store and
buying an iPad, because we could have gone and got a
Microsoft Surface for next to nothing from Microsoft if
that was what we wanted or we could have got a nice
cheap Galaxy Tablet from Samsung. But because the
iPad had shown us the way in terms of what consumer
technology could do within our industry, it allowed us
to do these things which software vendors were forced
to embrace as well and provide sexy user experiences,
fantastic mobility and things like that. In the world
of cinema, they’d call such a plot device a MacGuffin.
Everybody needs to be prepared to deliver anything,
anywhere on any device.
“The data on attrition rates, even for iPads, are really low because if you give
employees something they enjoy using and allow them to put personal content on as
well as company stuff, they’re going to take good care of it.”
MAY/JUNE 2014 | AIRCRAFT IT MRO | WHITE PAPER: FLATIRONS | 27
where an electronic signature is used. There’s a whole
slew of ways an electronic signature can be included
and the whole integrity behind that. Our industry’s
built on integrity… high quality, high integrity very
knowledgeable people. And as we try to build a leaner
industry, conserve costs and resources there’s effort to
deskill elements of our business and this whole identity
thing is becoming a greater concern because we don’t
want to be the guy who signs off on the aircraft that
falls out of the sky somewhere.
Identity will be a big thing. Again, I don’t know what
it’s going to look like but we need to see it coming.
Technology OEMs are doing a lot of work in terms
of capturing identity through biometrics. The latest
generation iPhone has a finger print scanner: we can
see a lot of wearable technology as well, designed to
help identify things (see below).
MEGA TREND #3
MACHINE LEARNING
The last mega trend is associated with Machine
Learning. A couple of years ago this might have been
described as artificial intelligence but that term implies
something that isn’t there. However, there’s a lot of
research and development going on with machine
learning in organizations like ours (Flatirons Solutions)
and such as Boeing and Airbus where systems are
being a lot more pre-emptive about what’s going on,
about what people need. At the moment if you’re going
through an IPC (illustrated parts catalog) and you
type in a part number, you might have to select ‘I’m
searching for a part number’ or similar. In the future,
MRO systems will behave a lot more like Google; you’ll
just type something in and the system will recognise
it as being a part number rather than, say, a serial
number. There’s a lot of work being done on machine
learning which will impact on mobility in a big way.
PREDICTIONS THAT ARE NOT THE FUTURE
WEARABLE TECHNOLOGY
Wearable technology, like Google Glass, seems to be
technology for the sake of it plus, in our industry, raises
security and privacy issues. It might be interesting to
track where your employees are, what they’re doing,
capturing time and attendance automatically but we’re
not embracing that kind of stuff right now using
cheaper technology like RFID. Wearable technology is
probably a few years off — Forrester says 2024 for the
business sector. It might be quite big from a consumer
point of view in next couple of years but it’s hard to see
a viable use case in our industry.
In closing, I’m reminded that we always need an
acronym, so here is mine to help you remember the key
things to do with mobility. I’ve called it ‘Be like Brenda’
Be like Brenda and think about a…
Responsive design;
Embrace the internet of things — all the stuff
delivering data to you; and say…
No to google glass, there’s no need for it;
Don’t underestimate identity; and, finally, we need to
think about mobility for…
Any device, any platform — delivering anything,
anywhere.
PAUL SAUNDERS
GLOBAL PRODUCT MANAGER,
FLATIRON SOLUTIONS
Paul is a trusted technology specialist
who has been working for and
advising MROs, airline operators, OEMs,
and software vendors since 1998.
He has unparalleled expertise in aviation software
design and mobility, having worked on apps used by
pilots and engineers all over the world.
Often called upon for speaking and writing
engagements, Paul is a regular contributor to
AircraftIT Operations eJournal, Aviation Week, and
other publications. When it comes to the adoption of
emerging technology in aerospace, particularly with
regards to mobility, Paul is a heavy weight visionary
and geek.
Paul joined the TechSight/X team in September 2013
and serves as a global product manager spearheading
flight operations, training and mobile solutions. He is
currently based in the UK.
INTERACTIVE
ASK THE AUTHOR A QUESTION
CLICK HERE TO LEAVE YOUR QUESTION
INTERACTIVE
JOIN THE DEBATE
CLICK HERE TO LEAVE YOUR FEEDBACK ABOUT THIS
ARTICLE AND START OR JOIN A DISCUSSION
FLATIRONS SOLUTIONS
Flatirons Solutions provides information management
consulting services and solutions for Fortune 500
and other companies in the aviation and aerospace,
enterprise, government, high-tech, and publishing
and media industries — helping customers deliver
the right information, at the right time, to the right
people.
The TechSight/X suite of products is an
independent solution for technical information
management developed specifically for the
aerospace industry to create, manage, and deliver
large volumes technical information in support of
the production, operation, and maintenance of
aircraft throughout their lifecycle.
Wearable Technology
MAYBE it’s because the genre is a derivative of the Bluetooth headset, a fashion
accessory, it seems, reserved for the worst kind of loudmouth sales trolls, or because
I’m just getting old and cantankerous, but I simply don’t get wearable technology. If the
adoption of mobility in the work place has taught us anything it is that investing in a
new technology without any real understanding of how it should be used is a waste of
time and effort.
There are some appealing examples of very niche use cases, such as with assisting
medical surgery or with helping those with disabilities, but I’m struggling to understand
the wider consumer or business appeal for this kind of technology. Virgin Atlantic
recently announced that they were experimenting with how Google Glass could
enhance passenger experience, presumably in order to more efficiently access company
CRM systems. This kind of forced innovation doesn’t represent a leap forward in
customer experience, it just creeps me out at the thought of the overbearing invasion of
privacy. Sure, we would all like for flight attendants to know our drinks preference, but
whatever happened to just talking to customers?
Also, the idea of tracking employees and assets via RFID tags and other near field
communication methods is not a new one. What activity trackers offer is an active device
which can log in detail movements and activities whilst automatically synching with
management software. This kind of device can offer much more scope than a passive RFID
tag and could be used for more detailed activity and location tracking. It has implications
for time booking, identity and location use cases. However personnel tracking can be a
divisive subject for the work force and unions alike. I’m all for improving efficiencies of
tracking resources, but as the cheaper RFID technology has not been widely adopted I
don’t hold any hope for wearable activity trackers in the very near future.
Part of the problem with the current crop of wearable technology devices is
platform fragmentation. At present there is no single go-to platform for wearable
device manufacturers and developers. Google are addressing this with the recent
announcement of an Android software development kit for wearable devices, there
are even rumours of Apple expanding their ecosystem in iOS8 to include health
related apps which would suggest the embracing of wearable technology. This will see
improved interconnectivity between devices and use case innovation. Forrester claim
in a recent report that wearable technology is scheduled to become pervasive in the
business world by 2024. But with current privacy concerns, security implications and
a near to non-existent eco-system there will need to be some major re-imagination of
wearable technology in the next few years in order to convince me of a viable future in
the business.
“…if a programmer wants to find out about a particular line of code, they Google it:
they don’t read the manual. This is how things work today; this is how the Internet
works: everybody Googles stuff.”
INTERACTIVE: GET INVOLVED!
Why not get involved with the debate? Send
your comments or questions to Michael by clicking here.
How I see IT
In the age of Netflix
and GoGo, why isn’t
aircraft data real?
Michael Denis
For the first time since 2001, I missed Aviation Week’s #MROAMevent: it was to attend the Abu Dhabi Global Aerospace Summit#ADG14; definitely the right choice.
The Summit is an invitation only, biannual forum bringingtogether international senior executives from across theaerospace, aviation and space sectors for four days of thoughtleadership and future growth strategies. Abu Dhabi has squarelyestablished itself as the ‘Davos of aviation’, along with Seattleand Toulouse, where CxOs come to set the vision and agendafor the future. Common themes repetitively highlighted on theopen panels included manufacturing technology innovationssuch as additive 3D printing, advancements in air traffic control,leaning and synchronizing manufacturing and MRO networks, andpartnerships for collaboration.
AIMING FOR THE MOON
A highlight of the Summit that everyone was talking about wasDr. Buzz Aldrin’s impassioned keynote presentation of the Apollospace program as the benchmark of what can be accomplishedwhen government and industry partner and set definitive goalswith specific timelines. During Dr. Aldrin’s speech, I couldn’thelp but think about the chasm between conquering putting aman on the moon in a decade, over four decades ago, versusour industry’s current inability for two airlines with differentIT systems to simply exchange a visit package, task cards,maintenance records, or real-time performance data even afterdecades of industry standardization efforts.
Information technology and the role of #AeroIT in enablinglean manufacturing, service parts optimization, labor productivity,mobility, etc… was the least directly discussed topic by far.
LESSONS FROM DISASTER
In the hallways, there were also considerable discussions aboutMalaysia MH370; what happened, would we ever find the aircraft,and what the ramifications for the industry will be, mainlyaround ‘real time’ aircraft performance data communicationsand combining the lessons learned and recommendations fromAir France AF447.
Mary Schreivo, ex FAA Inspector General turned CNNcommentator recently said, “The importance of accidents toregulations in the United States [is significant]. We call the FAAthe tombstone agency … because they [regulate] by countingtombstones. And that’s not… being flippant because, in fact, theyhave to do a cost-benefit analysis before they put forth anyregulation.” Some believe the loss of MH370 is a seminal eventthat will change the industry.
THE MEANING OF ‘REAL’
Real time’ data communications isn’t a technology challenge; itisn’t a cost issue, although some airlines may argue it should be.Preventing another AF447 or MH370 is simply a matter of will.Synonyms for ‘real’ are ‘genuine’, ‘authentic’, ‘factual’, ‘valid’ and‘true’. Because of airworthiness, we expect aircraft data to bereal – just not necessarily real time, real interoperable, or realstandard. Data, information, content, and knowledge are the oilsthat lubricate the system of systems that ensures airworthiness,as well as improves product lifecycles, supply networks, aircraftdispatch rates and asset utilization; ultimately improving thepassenger experience and cost.
Which returns me to my opening question; ‘In the age of Netflixon-demand video and GoGo in flight WiFi, why isn’t aircraftdata real time and real seamlessly interoperable?’
Maybe by the next Global Aerospace Summit in 2016, aircraft datawill be real. At least that’s how I’d like to see IT.
“Real time’ data communications
isn’t a technology challenge;
it isn’t a cost issue, although some
airlines may argue it should be.”
MAY/JUNE 2014 | AIRCRAFT IT MRO | WHITE PAPER: 2MoRO | 31
CONSULTING | TECHNOLOGY | OUTSOURCING
Delays cost the airline
industry $5 billion annually.
Does your mobile solution
improve dispatch rates?
TechSight/X mobile solutions for Android, iPad,
and Windows tablets improve labor productivity,
helping you return aircraft to active revenue-
generating service dependably.
Contact Flatirons Solutions to discover more.

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Was ist angesagt?

The Internet of Flying Things - Part 1
The Internet of Flying Things - Part 1The Internet of Flying Things - Part 1
The Internet of Flying Things - Part 1Michael Denis
 
The Internet of Flying Things - Part 2
The Internet of Flying Things - Part 2The Internet of Flying Things - Part 2
The Internet of Flying Things - Part 2Michael Denis
 
Collaboration - Essential to Aviation MRO Innovation
Collaboration - Essential to Aviation MRO InnovationCollaboration - Essential to Aviation MRO Innovation
Collaboration - Essential to Aviation MRO InnovationMichael Denis
 
AircraftIT MRO Journal Vol 3.4 Autonomics and the Network of Everything (NoE)
AircraftIT MRO Journal Vol 3.4 Autonomics and the Network of Everything (NoE)AircraftIT MRO Journal Vol 3.4 Autonomics and the Network of Everything (NoE)
AircraftIT MRO Journal Vol 3.4 Autonomics and the Network of Everything (NoE)Michael Denis
 
Aircraft IT MRO eJournal "Airworthiness is Changing" How I See IT
Aircraft IT MRO eJournal "Airworthiness is Changing" How I See ITAircraft IT MRO eJournal "Airworthiness is Changing" How I See IT
Aircraft IT MRO eJournal "Airworthiness is Changing" How I See ITMichael Denis
 
Aviation MRO Big Data & Advanced Analytics Industry Survey
Aviation MRO Big Data & Advanced Analytics Industry SurveyAviation MRO Big Data & Advanced Analytics Industry Survey
Aviation MRO Big Data & Advanced Analytics Industry SurveyMichael Denis
 
IoT in aircraft manufacturing-tech m
IoT in aircraft manufacturing-tech mIoT in aircraft manufacturing-tech m
IoT in aircraft manufacturing-tech mAshutosh Pandey
 
sec301 aircraft manufacturing
sec301 aircraft manufacturingsec301 aircraft manufacturing
sec301 aircraft manufacturingAlaz Alev
 
5 Autonomous Cars Trends Everyone Should Know About In 2019
5 Autonomous Cars Trends Everyone Should Know About In 20195 Autonomous Cars Trends Everyone Should Know About In 2019
5 Autonomous Cars Trends Everyone Should Know About In 2019Bernard Marr
 
What's HOT, What's NOT, What's NEXT in AvMRO
What's HOT, What's NOT, What's NEXT in AvMROWhat's HOT, What's NOT, What's NEXT in AvMRO
What's HOT, What's NOT, What's NEXT in AvMROMichael Denis
 
AVI-NEWS Letter 15th Issue
AVI-NEWS Letter 15th IssueAVI-NEWS Letter 15th Issue
AVI-NEWS Letter 15th IssueAvitrue Spares
 
Avi news letter 15th issue
Avi news letter 15th issueAvi news letter 15th issue
Avi news letter 15th issueAvitrueSpares
 
How Boeing is Using AWS to Transform Commercial Aviation (ENT213) | AWS re:In...
How Boeing is Using AWS to Transform Commercial Aviation (ENT213) | AWS re:In...How Boeing is Using AWS to Transform Commercial Aviation (ENT213) | AWS re:In...
How Boeing is Using AWS to Transform Commercial Aviation (ENT213) | AWS re:In...Amazon Web Services
 
The Industrialist: Sparks
The Industrialist: SparksThe Industrialist: Sparks
The Industrialist: Sparksaccenture
 
Protecting Autonomous Vehicles and Connected Services with Software Defined P...
Protecting Autonomous Vehicles and Connected Services with Software Defined P...Protecting Autonomous Vehicles and Connected Services with Software Defined P...
Protecting Autonomous Vehicles and Connected Services with Software Defined P...Mahbubul Alam
 
Artificial Intelligence In The Automotive Industry - M&A Trend Analysis
Artificial Intelligence In The Automotive Industry - M&A Trend AnalysisArtificial Intelligence In The Automotive Industry - M&A Trend Analysis
Artificial Intelligence In The Automotive Industry - M&A Trend AnalysisNetscribes
 
Hitch-hikers guide to AI for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles
Hitch-hikers guide to AI for Connected and Autonomous VehiclesHitch-hikers guide to AI for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles
Hitch-hikers guide to AI for Connected and Autonomous VehiclesBill Harpley
 
Cloud backup-for-endpoint-devices
Cloud backup-for-endpoint-devicesCloud backup-for-endpoint-devices
Cloud backup-for-endpoint-devicesIcomm Technologies
 
Automotive Artificial Intelligence Market Insights PPT
Automotive Artificial Intelligence Market Insights PPTAutomotive Artificial Intelligence Market Insights PPT
Automotive Artificial Intelligence Market Insights PPTEmmaHarmison
 

Was ist angesagt? (20)

The Internet of Flying Things - Part 1
The Internet of Flying Things - Part 1The Internet of Flying Things - Part 1
The Internet of Flying Things - Part 1
 
The Internet of Flying Things - Part 2
The Internet of Flying Things - Part 2The Internet of Flying Things - Part 2
The Internet of Flying Things - Part 2
 
Collaboration - Essential to Aviation MRO Innovation
Collaboration - Essential to Aviation MRO InnovationCollaboration - Essential to Aviation MRO Innovation
Collaboration - Essential to Aviation MRO Innovation
 
AircraftIT MRO Journal Vol 3.4 Autonomics and the Network of Everything (NoE)
AircraftIT MRO Journal Vol 3.4 Autonomics and the Network of Everything (NoE)AircraftIT MRO Journal Vol 3.4 Autonomics and the Network of Everything (NoE)
AircraftIT MRO Journal Vol 3.4 Autonomics and the Network of Everything (NoE)
 
Aircraft IT MRO eJournal "Airworthiness is Changing" How I See IT
Aircraft IT MRO eJournal "Airworthiness is Changing" How I See ITAircraft IT MRO eJournal "Airworthiness is Changing" How I See IT
Aircraft IT MRO eJournal "Airworthiness is Changing" How I See IT
 
Aviation MRO Big Data & Advanced Analytics Industry Survey
Aviation MRO Big Data & Advanced Analytics Industry SurveyAviation MRO Big Data & Advanced Analytics Industry Survey
Aviation MRO Big Data & Advanced Analytics Industry Survey
 
IoT Aerospace
IoT AerospaceIoT Aerospace
IoT Aerospace
 
IoT in aircraft manufacturing-tech m
IoT in aircraft manufacturing-tech mIoT in aircraft manufacturing-tech m
IoT in aircraft manufacturing-tech m
 
sec301 aircraft manufacturing
sec301 aircraft manufacturingsec301 aircraft manufacturing
sec301 aircraft manufacturing
 
5 Autonomous Cars Trends Everyone Should Know About In 2019
5 Autonomous Cars Trends Everyone Should Know About In 20195 Autonomous Cars Trends Everyone Should Know About In 2019
5 Autonomous Cars Trends Everyone Should Know About In 2019
 
What's HOT, What's NOT, What's NEXT in AvMRO
What's HOT, What's NOT, What's NEXT in AvMROWhat's HOT, What's NOT, What's NEXT in AvMRO
What's HOT, What's NOT, What's NEXT in AvMRO
 
AVI-NEWS Letter 15th Issue
AVI-NEWS Letter 15th IssueAVI-NEWS Letter 15th Issue
AVI-NEWS Letter 15th Issue
 
Avi news letter 15th issue
Avi news letter 15th issueAvi news letter 15th issue
Avi news letter 15th issue
 
How Boeing is Using AWS to Transform Commercial Aviation (ENT213) | AWS re:In...
How Boeing is Using AWS to Transform Commercial Aviation (ENT213) | AWS re:In...How Boeing is Using AWS to Transform Commercial Aviation (ENT213) | AWS re:In...
How Boeing is Using AWS to Transform Commercial Aviation (ENT213) | AWS re:In...
 
The Industrialist: Sparks
The Industrialist: SparksThe Industrialist: Sparks
The Industrialist: Sparks
 
Protecting Autonomous Vehicles and Connected Services with Software Defined P...
Protecting Autonomous Vehicles and Connected Services with Software Defined P...Protecting Autonomous Vehicles and Connected Services with Software Defined P...
Protecting Autonomous Vehicles and Connected Services with Software Defined P...
 
Artificial Intelligence In The Automotive Industry - M&A Trend Analysis
Artificial Intelligence In The Automotive Industry - M&A Trend AnalysisArtificial Intelligence In The Automotive Industry - M&A Trend Analysis
Artificial Intelligence In The Automotive Industry - M&A Trend Analysis
 
Hitch-hikers guide to AI for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles
Hitch-hikers guide to AI for Connected and Autonomous VehiclesHitch-hikers guide to AI for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles
Hitch-hikers guide to AI for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles
 
Cloud backup-for-endpoint-devices
Cloud backup-for-endpoint-devicesCloud backup-for-endpoint-devices
Cloud backup-for-endpoint-devices
 
Automotive Artificial Intelligence Market Insights PPT
Automotive Artificial Intelligence Market Insights PPTAutomotive Artificial Intelligence Market Insights PPT
Automotive Artificial Intelligence Market Insights PPT
 

Andere mochten auch

Miami - Why is MRO software so complicated
Miami - Why is MRO software so complicatedMiami - Why is MRO software so complicated
Miami - Why is MRO software so complicatedPaul Saunders
 
Food and Drink MRO Spares Data Audit
Food and Drink MRO Spares Data AuditFood and Drink MRO Spares Data Audit
Food and Drink MRO Spares Data AuditDavid Thompson
 
Aviation MRO IT: Emergence of SaaS and Convergence of BPO
Aviation MRO IT: Emergence of SaaS and Convergence of BPOAviation MRO IT: Emergence of SaaS and Convergence of BPO
Aviation MRO IT: Emergence of SaaS and Convergence of BPOguesta9496c4
 
MRO Market Update and Industry Trends
MRO Market Update and Industry TrendsMRO Market Update and Industry Trends
MRO Market Update and Industry TrendsICF
 
Growing MRO Business: Closing the Gaps
Growing MRO Business: Closing the GapsGrowing MRO Business: Closing the Gaps
Growing MRO Business: Closing the GapsUPS Longitudes
 

Andere mochten auch (7)

Miami - Why is MRO software so complicated
Miami - Why is MRO software so complicatedMiami - Why is MRO software so complicated
Miami - Why is MRO software so complicated
 
Food and Drink MRO Spares Data Audit
Food and Drink MRO Spares Data AuditFood and Drink MRO Spares Data Audit
Food and Drink MRO Spares Data Audit
 
Aviation MRO IT: Emergence of SaaS and Convergence of BPO
Aviation MRO IT: Emergence of SaaS and Convergence of BPOAviation MRO IT: Emergence of SaaS and Convergence of BPO
Aviation MRO IT: Emergence of SaaS and Convergence of BPO
 
MRO Market Update and Industry Trends
MRO Market Update and Industry TrendsMRO Market Update and Industry Trends
MRO Market Update and Industry Trends
 
Business Analytics for the Airline MRO Industry: An Analytics Master class
Business Analytics for the Airline MRO Industry: An Analytics Master classBusiness Analytics for the Airline MRO Industry: An Analytics Master class
Business Analytics for the Airline MRO Industry: An Analytics Master class
 
Growing MRO Business: Closing the Gaps
Growing MRO Business: Closing the GapsGrowing MRO Business: Closing the Gaps
Growing MRO Business: Closing the Gaps
 
Made in China 2.0
Made in China 2.0Made in China 2.0
Made in China 2.0
 

Ähnlich wie AircraftIT MRO Journal Vol 3.2

Aircraft IT MRO eJournal "eSignatures" How I See IT
Aircraft IT MRO eJournal "eSignatures" How I See ITAircraft IT MRO eJournal "eSignatures" How I See IT
Aircraft IT MRO eJournal "eSignatures" How I See ITMichael Denis
 
10 Most Promising Aerospace Tech Solution Providers January 2022
10 Most Promising Aerospace Tech Solution Providers January 202210 Most Promising Aerospace Tech Solution Providers January 2022
10 Most Promising Aerospace Tech Solution Providers January 2022InsightsSuccess4
 
Red Cat - Investor Presentation Feb 2021
Red Cat - Investor Presentation Feb 2021Red Cat - Investor Presentation Feb 2021
Red Cat - Investor Presentation Feb 2021RedChip Companies, Inc.
 
Red Cat - Investor Presentation Mar 2021
Red Cat - Investor Presentation Mar 2021Red Cat - Investor Presentation Mar 2021
Red Cat - Investor Presentation Mar 2021RedChip Companies, Inc.
 
Intergraph campus 2011 pre placement talk
Intergraph campus 2011   pre placement talkIntergraph campus 2011   pre placement talk
Intergraph campus 2011 pre placement talksajikvt
 
Honeywell aerospace launches rfid rollout
Honeywell aerospace launches rfid rolloutHoneywell aerospace launches rfid rollout
Honeywell aerospace launches rfid rolloutAngela M. Deisley
 
VMware Solutions for the Connected Car
VMware Solutions for the Connected CarVMware Solutions for the Connected Car
VMware Solutions for the Connected CarAngel Villar Garea
 
Analyzing Dispersion Methodology Secure Against The...
Analyzing Dispersion Methodology Secure Against The...Analyzing Dispersion Methodology Secure Against The...
Analyzing Dispersion Methodology Secure Against The...Karen Oliver
 
Questions On Unitedlayers-Services
Questions On Unitedlayers-ServicesQuestions On Unitedlayers-Services
Questions On Unitedlayers-ServicesBeth Woodward
 
Altitudes Office in the Sky
Altitudes Office in the SkyAltitudes Office in the Sky
Altitudes Office in the SkyChris Moore
 
Google Cloud Lightning Talk
Google Cloud Lightning TalkGoogle Cloud Lightning Talk
Google Cloud Lightning TalkDMI
 
The Sky Guys Deck
The Sky Guys DeckThe Sky Guys Deck
The Sky Guys DeckTom Hanson
 
Nextgen tools for data migration in aviation
Nextgen tools for data migration in aviationNextgen tools for data migration in aviation
Nextgen tools for data migration in aviationEXSYN Aviation Solutions
 
Internet of Things (IoT) Opportunity for Channels, VARs, MSPs, Resellers, All...
Internet of Things (IoT) Opportunity for Channels, VARs, MSPs, Resellers, All...Internet of Things (IoT) Opportunity for Channels, VARs, MSPs, Resellers, All...
Internet of Things (IoT) Opportunity for Channels, VARs, MSPs, Resellers, All...Jay McBain
 
Aircraft IT Ops V11.3.pdf
Aircraft IT Ops V11.3.pdfAircraft IT Ops V11.3.pdf
Aircraft IT Ops V11.3.pdfYsselstyn
 
July-2023-AUTO-Ebook.pdf
July-2023-AUTO-Ebook.pdfJuly-2023-AUTO-Ebook.pdf
July-2023-AUTO-Ebook.pdfjmpardal1
 
CIMPA : Enhancing Data Exposition & Digital Twin for Airbus Helicopters
CIMPA : Enhancing Data Exposition & Digital Twin for Airbus HelicoptersCIMPA : Enhancing Data Exposition & Digital Twin for Airbus Helicopters
CIMPA : Enhancing Data Exposition & Digital Twin for Airbus HelicoptersNeo4j
 
CONTENT & APPS FOR AUTOMOTIVE EUROPE 2014
CONTENT & APPS FOR AUTOMOTIVE EUROPE 2014CONTENT & APPS FOR AUTOMOTIVE EUROPE 2014
CONTENT & APPS FOR AUTOMOTIVE EUROPE 2014Nicola Barozzi 🚘✔
 

Ähnlich wie AircraftIT MRO Journal Vol 3.2 (20)

Aircraft IT MRO eJournal "eSignatures" How I See IT
Aircraft IT MRO eJournal "eSignatures" How I See ITAircraft IT MRO eJournal "eSignatures" How I See IT
Aircraft IT MRO eJournal "eSignatures" How I See IT
 
10 Most Promising Aerospace Tech Solution Providers January 2022
10 Most Promising Aerospace Tech Solution Providers January 202210 Most Promising Aerospace Tech Solution Providers January 2022
10 Most Promising Aerospace Tech Solution Providers January 2022
 
Red Cat - Investor Presentation Feb 2021
Red Cat - Investor Presentation Feb 2021Red Cat - Investor Presentation Feb 2021
Red Cat - Investor Presentation Feb 2021
 
Red Cat - Investor Presentation Mar 2021
Red Cat - Investor Presentation Mar 2021Red Cat - Investor Presentation Mar 2021
Red Cat - Investor Presentation Mar 2021
 
Intergraph campus 2011 pre placement talk
Intergraph campus 2011   pre placement talkIntergraph campus 2011   pre placement talk
Intergraph campus 2011 pre placement talk
 
Honeywell aerospace launches rfid rollout
Honeywell aerospace launches rfid rolloutHoneywell aerospace launches rfid rollout
Honeywell aerospace launches rfid rollout
 
industrial
industrialindustrial
industrial
 
VMware Solutions for the Connected Car
VMware Solutions for the Connected CarVMware Solutions for the Connected Car
VMware Solutions for the Connected Car
 
Analyzing Dispersion Methodology Secure Against The...
Analyzing Dispersion Methodology Secure Against The...Analyzing Dispersion Methodology Secure Against The...
Analyzing Dispersion Methodology Secure Against The...
 
Questions On Unitedlayers-Services
Questions On Unitedlayers-ServicesQuestions On Unitedlayers-Services
Questions On Unitedlayers-Services
 
Redington Value Journal - June 2016
Redington Value Journal - June 2016Redington Value Journal - June 2016
Redington Value Journal - June 2016
 
Altitudes Office in the Sky
Altitudes Office in the SkyAltitudes Office in the Sky
Altitudes Office in the Sky
 
Google Cloud Lightning Talk
Google Cloud Lightning TalkGoogle Cloud Lightning Talk
Google Cloud Lightning Talk
 
The Sky Guys Deck
The Sky Guys DeckThe Sky Guys Deck
The Sky Guys Deck
 
Nextgen tools for data migration in aviation
Nextgen tools for data migration in aviationNextgen tools for data migration in aviation
Nextgen tools for data migration in aviation
 
Internet of Things (IoT) Opportunity for Channels, VARs, MSPs, Resellers, All...
Internet of Things (IoT) Opportunity for Channels, VARs, MSPs, Resellers, All...Internet of Things (IoT) Opportunity for Channels, VARs, MSPs, Resellers, All...
Internet of Things (IoT) Opportunity for Channels, VARs, MSPs, Resellers, All...
 
Aircraft IT Ops V11.3.pdf
Aircraft IT Ops V11.3.pdfAircraft IT Ops V11.3.pdf
Aircraft IT Ops V11.3.pdf
 
July-2023-AUTO-Ebook.pdf
July-2023-AUTO-Ebook.pdfJuly-2023-AUTO-Ebook.pdf
July-2023-AUTO-Ebook.pdf
 
CIMPA : Enhancing Data Exposition & Digital Twin for Airbus Helicopters
CIMPA : Enhancing Data Exposition & Digital Twin for Airbus HelicoptersCIMPA : Enhancing Data Exposition & Digital Twin for Airbus Helicopters
CIMPA : Enhancing Data Exposition & Digital Twin for Airbus Helicopters
 
CONTENT & APPS FOR AUTOMOTIVE EUROPE 2014
CONTENT & APPS FOR AUTOMOTIVE EUROPE 2014CONTENT & APPS FOR AUTOMOTIVE EUROPE 2014
CONTENT & APPS FOR AUTOMOTIVE EUROPE 2014
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen

Salesforce Miami User Group Event - 1st Quarter 2024
Salesforce Miami User Group Event - 1st Quarter 2024Salesforce Miami User Group Event - 1st Quarter 2024
Salesforce Miami User Group Event - 1st Quarter 2024SkyPlanner
 
Secure your environment with UiPath and CyberArk technologies - Session 1
Secure your environment with UiPath and CyberArk technologies - Session 1Secure your environment with UiPath and CyberArk technologies - Session 1
Secure your environment with UiPath and CyberArk technologies - Session 1DianaGray10
 
Igniting Next Level Productivity with AI-Infused Data Integration Workflows
Igniting Next Level Productivity with AI-Infused Data Integration WorkflowsIgniting Next Level Productivity with AI-Infused Data Integration Workflows
Igniting Next Level Productivity with AI-Infused Data Integration WorkflowsSafe Software
 
NIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF) 2.0 Workshop
NIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF) 2.0 WorkshopNIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF) 2.0 Workshop
NIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF) 2.0 WorkshopBachir Benyammi
 
Linked Data in Production: Moving Beyond Ontologies
Linked Data in Production: Moving Beyond OntologiesLinked Data in Production: Moving Beyond Ontologies
Linked Data in Production: Moving Beyond OntologiesDavid Newbury
 
Artificial Intelligence & SEO Trends for 2024
Artificial Intelligence & SEO Trends for 2024Artificial Intelligence & SEO Trends for 2024
Artificial Intelligence & SEO Trends for 2024D Cloud Solutions
 
20230202 - Introduction to tis-py
20230202 - Introduction to tis-py20230202 - Introduction to tis-py
20230202 - Introduction to tis-pyJamie (Taka) Wang
 
Crea il tuo assistente AI con lo Stregatto (open source python framework)
Crea il tuo assistente AI con lo Stregatto (open source python framework)Crea il tuo assistente AI con lo Stregatto (open source python framework)
Crea il tuo assistente AI con lo Stregatto (open source python framework)Commit University
 
Comparing Sidecar-less Service Mesh from Cilium and Istio
Comparing Sidecar-less Service Mesh from Cilium and IstioComparing Sidecar-less Service Mesh from Cilium and Istio
Comparing Sidecar-less Service Mesh from Cilium and IstioChristian Posta
 
activity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdfactivity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdf
activity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdfactivity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdfactivity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdfactivity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdf
activity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdfactivity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdfJamie (Taka) Wang
 
UiPath Studio Web workshop series - Day 6
UiPath Studio Web workshop series - Day 6UiPath Studio Web workshop series - Day 6
UiPath Studio Web workshop series - Day 6DianaGray10
 
UWB Technology for Enhanced Indoor and Outdoor Positioning in Physiological M...
UWB Technology for Enhanced Indoor and Outdoor Positioning in Physiological M...UWB Technology for Enhanced Indoor and Outdoor Positioning in Physiological M...
UWB Technology for Enhanced Indoor and Outdoor Positioning in Physiological M...UbiTrack UK
 
Meet the new FSP 3000 M-Flex800™
Meet the new FSP 3000 M-Flex800™Meet the new FSP 3000 M-Flex800™
Meet the new FSP 3000 M-Flex800™Adtran
 
Empowering Africa's Next Generation: The AI Leadership Blueprint
Empowering Africa's Next Generation: The AI Leadership BlueprintEmpowering Africa's Next Generation: The AI Leadership Blueprint
Empowering Africa's Next Generation: The AI Leadership BlueprintMahmoud Rabie
 
Cybersecurity Workshop #1.pptx
Cybersecurity Workshop #1.pptxCybersecurity Workshop #1.pptx
Cybersecurity Workshop #1.pptxGDSC PJATK
 
AI You Can Trust - Ensuring Success with Data Integrity Webinar
AI You Can Trust - Ensuring Success with Data Integrity WebinarAI You Can Trust - Ensuring Success with Data Integrity Webinar
AI You Can Trust - Ensuring Success with Data Integrity WebinarPrecisely
 
The Data Metaverse: Unpacking the Roles, Use Cases, and Tech Trends in Data a...
The Data Metaverse: Unpacking the Roles, Use Cases, and Tech Trends in Data a...The Data Metaverse: Unpacking the Roles, Use Cases, and Tech Trends in Data a...
The Data Metaverse: Unpacking the Roles, Use Cases, and Tech Trends in Data a...Aggregage
 
Nanopower In Semiconductor Industry.pdf
Nanopower  In Semiconductor Industry.pdfNanopower  In Semiconductor Industry.pdf
Nanopower In Semiconductor Industry.pdfPedro Manuel
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen (20)

Salesforce Miami User Group Event - 1st Quarter 2024
Salesforce Miami User Group Event - 1st Quarter 2024Salesforce Miami User Group Event - 1st Quarter 2024
Salesforce Miami User Group Event - 1st Quarter 2024
 
Secure your environment with UiPath and CyberArk technologies - Session 1
Secure your environment with UiPath and CyberArk technologies - Session 1Secure your environment with UiPath and CyberArk technologies - Session 1
Secure your environment with UiPath and CyberArk technologies - Session 1
 
Igniting Next Level Productivity with AI-Infused Data Integration Workflows
Igniting Next Level Productivity with AI-Infused Data Integration WorkflowsIgniting Next Level Productivity with AI-Infused Data Integration Workflows
Igniting Next Level Productivity with AI-Infused Data Integration Workflows
 
NIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF) 2.0 Workshop
NIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF) 2.0 WorkshopNIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF) 2.0 Workshop
NIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF) 2.0 Workshop
 
Linked Data in Production: Moving Beyond Ontologies
Linked Data in Production: Moving Beyond OntologiesLinked Data in Production: Moving Beyond Ontologies
Linked Data in Production: Moving Beyond Ontologies
 
Artificial Intelligence & SEO Trends for 2024
Artificial Intelligence & SEO Trends for 2024Artificial Intelligence & SEO Trends for 2024
Artificial Intelligence & SEO Trends for 2024
 
20230202 - Introduction to tis-py
20230202 - Introduction to tis-py20230202 - Introduction to tis-py
20230202 - Introduction to tis-py
 
Crea il tuo assistente AI con lo Stregatto (open source python framework)
Crea il tuo assistente AI con lo Stregatto (open source python framework)Crea il tuo assistente AI con lo Stregatto (open source python framework)
Crea il tuo assistente AI con lo Stregatto (open source python framework)
 
Comparing Sidecar-less Service Mesh from Cilium and Istio
Comparing Sidecar-less Service Mesh from Cilium and IstioComparing Sidecar-less Service Mesh from Cilium and Istio
Comparing Sidecar-less Service Mesh from Cilium and Istio
 
activity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdfactivity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdf
activity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdfactivity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdfactivity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdfactivity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdf
activity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdfactivity_diagram_combine_v4_20190827.pdf
 
UiPath Studio Web workshop series - Day 6
UiPath Studio Web workshop series - Day 6UiPath Studio Web workshop series - Day 6
UiPath Studio Web workshop series - Day 6
 
UWB Technology for Enhanced Indoor and Outdoor Positioning in Physiological M...
UWB Technology for Enhanced Indoor and Outdoor Positioning in Physiological M...UWB Technology for Enhanced Indoor and Outdoor Positioning in Physiological M...
UWB Technology for Enhanced Indoor and Outdoor Positioning in Physiological M...
 
201610817 - edge part1
201610817 - edge part1201610817 - edge part1
201610817 - edge part1
 
Meet the new FSP 3000 M-Flex800™
Meet the new FSP 3000 M-Flex800™Meet the new FSP 3000 M-Flex800™
Meet the new FSP 3000 M-Flex800™
 
Empowering Africa's Next Generation: The AI Leadership Blueprint
Empowering Africa's Next Generation: The AI Leadership BlueprintEmpowering Africa's Next Generation: The AI Leadership Blueprint
Empowering Africa's Next Generation: The AI Leadership Blueprint
 
Cybersecurity Workshop #1.pptx
Cybersecurity Workshop #1.pptxCybersecurity Workshop #1.pptx
Cybersecurity Workshop #1.pptx
 
20230104 - machine vision
20230104 - machine vision20230104 - machine vision
20230104 - machine vision
 
AI You Can Trust - Ensuring Success with Data Integrity Webinar
AI You Can Trust - Ensuring Success with Data Integrity WebinarAI You Can Trust - Ensuring Success with Data Integrity Webinar
AI You Can Trust - Ensuring Success with Data Integrity Webinar
 
The Data Metaverse: Unpacking the Roles, Use Cases, and Tech Trends in Data a...
The Data Metaverse: Unpacking the Roles, Use Cases, and Tech Trends in Data a...The Data Metaverse: Unpacking the Roles, Use Cases, and Tech Trends in Data a...
The Data Metaverse: Unpacking the Roles, Use Cases, and Tech Trends in Data a...
 
Nanopower In Semiconductor Industry.pdf
Nanopower  In Semiconductor Industry.pdfNanopower  In Semiconductor Industry.pdf
Nanopower In Semiconductor Industry.pdf
 

AircraftIT MRO Journal Vol 3.2

  • 1. White Paper: Flatirons Solutions, Rusada, AirWorks Case Study: SFS Aviation Vendor Job Card: AV-BASE Systems PLUS… How I see IT, News, Upcoming and Past Webinars, MRO Software Directory V3.2 • MAY/JUNE 2014 MRO DATA IS COMING Realizing the value of information KEEPING MRO IT LEAN Improving the function that improves the business MOBILITY DEEP DIVE The future for Aerospace Mobility
  • 2. Editor’s comment Data is the catalyst that turns experience into value but it’s powerful stuff and must be properly handled to do any good. If you lived in Europe during the 1980s, you will have become familiar with food mountains and wine lakes. But don’t be deceived, these were not good things; they were the result of a Common Agricultural Policy that, in its drive to ensure food security, ended up generating more food than Europe could consume… or sell or give away without damaging markets. Aviation IT faces a similar challenge today. Data volumes are growing exponentially with, not only traditional IT systems harvesting and generating data in increasing volumes but also Aircraft themselves starting to generate data on every aspect of their function before, during and after each flight. As with European food and wine, the basic idea has worked well, there’s lots of data: the challenge is what to do with the mountains of information, how to apply them to the useful purposes we had in mind when the harvesting and generating capabilities were first mooted. The organization, integration and application of data for business process improvement are our themes for the issue. We look at Data Warehousing, how it works, and how it can be used to drive better business through better information and reports. Mobility is a key component in the drive to leverage data as a business advantage and so our article on mobility, where it is going and how it can be used will tick a lot of boxes. And, looking to the wider context, if IT is used to improve other processes in the business, what about making sure that IT itself is lean? We have an article addressing that. Also, we always like to see how all of this works in the real world and so the case study on a new MRO solution for a helicopter operator will be of great interest. As always, you’ll learn how Michael Denis sees IT and be able to take a broader view of the news and information that matters in your sector. And Aircraft IT live demonstration webinars let readers research the software market from the convenience of their own desk to find a package that could meet their needs by accessing past webinars with more focus than ever while, of course, future webinars are a valuable resource available to every reader who registers. Data volumes and quality will continue to grow, systems become more capable and delivery more convenient. Whatever the developments, Aircraft IT MRO will continue to bring the best ideas to your desktop or tablet screen with every issue. Aircraft IT MRO: organizing information about your world for you. Ed Haskey 04 NEWS With an increasing variety of operating profiles, Aircraft MRO IT has to adapt to meet a growing range of demands. MRO IT managers can follow developments on http://www.aircraftit.com/MRO/Index.aspx and here in the Aircraft IT MRO e-journal. 18 CASE STUDY: FACING UP TO THE CHALLENGE OF OFFSHORE HELICOPTER OPERATIONS Brian P. McDonald, Director Asian Aviation Services (AAR); Management Consultant, SFS Aviation Co., Ltd. When SFS Aviation was seeking a software solution, they needed one that could address all of their needs and challenges throughout the business. 21 VENDOR JOB CARD ThedevelopmentpathandtechnologyinnovationsthathavebroughtAV-BASESystemstoitspresentsuccess. In this Job Card, Bert Vergeer, Vice President, Sales and Marketing at AV-BASE Systems, Inc. explains AV-BASE, its IT philosophy and its achievements. 22 UPCOMING LIVE MRO SOFTWARE DEMONSTRATION WEBINAR A preview of the live MRO software demonstration webinar featuring AviIT, on 8th May 2014. 24 WHITE PAPER: MOBILITY DEEP DIVE Paul Saunders, Global Product Manager, Flatirons Solutions Mobility is the single word that encapsulates a host of IT issues from getting content to where people can use it to the Internet of things, identity and machine learning. 28 WHITE PAPER: LOST IN TRANSLATION? Tim Alden, Commercial Director, Rusada Warehouses ensure that variable inputs feed stable outputs. A data warehouse can ensure that multiple sources of data feed useful reports determined by need. 31 COLUMN: HOW I SEE IT Michael Denis asks; In the age of Netflix and GoGo, why isn’t aircraft data real? More than 40 years ago we’d put a man on the Moon after just a 10 year program. Why then, today, is it still difficult to integrate data from different systems? 32 PAST WEBINARS: KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER AND ACCESS FOR INDUSTRY EXPERTS View Video Recordings of our Past Live MRO Software Demonstration Webinars. See full information and view video recordings of past MRO Software demonstrations, including: ADSoftware, Volartec and IDMR Solutions. 34 WHITE PAPER: ALSO A BUSINESS PROCESS Ravinder Pal Singh (Ravi), CTO and CIO, Air Works While IT is the driver of leaner processes in other parts of the business, it should also operate as integral to the business, seeking to make its own processes lean. 38 EVENT PREVIEW: AIRLINE & AEROSPACE MRO AND OPERATIONS IT CONFERENCE 43 MRO SOFTWARE DIRECTORY A detailed look at the world’s leading MRO IT systems. CLICK HERE: Send your feedback and suggestions to AircraftIT MRO CLICK HERE: Subscribe for freeAircraftIT MRO is published bi-monthly and is an affiliate of Aircraft Commerce and part of the AviationNextGen Ltd group. The entire contents within this publication © Copyright 2014 AviationNextGen Ltd an independent publication and not affiliated with any of the IT vendors or suppliers. Content may not be reproduced without the strict written agreement of the publisher. The views and opinions expressed in this publication are the views of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of their companies or of the publisher. The publisher does not guarantee the source, originality, accuracy, completeness or reliability of any statement, information, data, finding, interpretation, advice, opinion, or view presented. AircraftIT MRO Publisher/Editor: Ed Haskey E-mail: ed.haskey@aircraftit.com Telephone: +44 1273 454 235 Website: www.aircraftIT.com Copy Editor/Contributor: John Hancock E-mail: john@aircraftit.com Magazine Production: Dean Cook E-mail: deancook@magazineproduction.com
  • 3. 8 | NEWS | AIRCRAFT IT MRO | MAY/JUNE 2014 ENGINEERING HOLDING, RUSSIA’S LARGEST DOMESTIC MRO PROVIDER, CHOOSE AERDATA’S STREAM DIGITAL AIRCRAFT RECORDS SOFTWARE IN mid-February 2014, AerData, provider of software and services for the aviation industry, announced that Engineering Holding, Russia’s largest domestic MRO provider, is to acquire STREAM aircraft records software. STREAM (Secure Technical Records for Electronic Asset Management) is a web- based solution used by some of the world’s largest airlines, lessors and MROs to manage aircraft and engine records. Commenting on the announcement, Mark Nieuwendijk, Managing Director of AerData said; “AerData have been working closely with Engineering Holding’s team to take full advantage of the benefits that STREAM can bring. It’s also our first customer in the rapidly expanding Russian airline and MRO market to implement the global standard in aircraft records on the STREAM platform.” Marat Tereshenko, General Director of S7 Engineering said; “We wish to adopt a global standard for managing records within our MRO customers. STREAM will integrate with our MRO IT system allowing full transparency on closed maintenance work, thereby increasing our quality and efficiency as we continue to grow our fleet and third party maintenance activity.” He added; “We are pleased to be making this announcement with AerData, a company that has a history of supporting successful large scale implementations with major airlines.” AERDATA’S IRISH OFFICE MOVES TO NEW LOCATION AT the same time, mid-February 2014, AerData announced the relocation of its Irish-based office to a new site in Dun Laoghaire, South County Dublin. Commenting on the announcement, Godfrey Ryan, Director Marketing and Sales, AerData said; “We established AerData’s presence in Ireland in 2011 and have grown the office to such an extent that a new location was needed to house the expanding team and provide a convenient location to host customers from Ireland and abroad.” He continued; “The high specification office is adjacent to Dun Laoghaire railway (DART) station which provides convenient connections to the city center, just a 20 minute journey away, and transport links nationwide make [the new office] easily accessible from anywhere in the Emerald Isle.” CROATIA AIRLINES CHOOSES AERDATA’S STREAM DIGITAL AIRCRAFT RECORDS SOFTWARE IN late February 2014, AerData announced Croatian flag carrier, Croatia Airlines, as the latest airline to acquire STREAM aircraft records software. Commenting on the announcement, Mark Nieuwendijk, Managing Director of AerData said; “Croatia Airlines is another great example of a company that will adopt STREAM for its own fleet and for its third-party maintenance work. The wide-ranging benefits for both applications are proven. We look forward to supporting Croatia Airlines for many years to come.” Davor Bujan, Engineering and Technical Support Manager, Croatia Airlines said; “STREAM consists of an easy to use and fully functional records management system that can integrate with our maintenance planning system. Our business is about fulfilling the requirements of customers both inside and outside the company, day to day and at major events like lease return or heavy maintenance work for other airlines. STREAM will go a long way towards satisfying those objectives.” AERDATA ANNOUNCES ‘REPAIR MAP’ MODULE FOR STREAM STILL in late February 2014, AerData also announced the launch of Repair Map, a new structural repair and damage management tool in its STREAM aircraft records software. To bring this about and to deliver a superior functionality to STREAM, AerData have exclusively partnered with the product developers of Repair Map, German- based Soft Aviation. Commenting on the announcement, Mark Nieuwendijk, Managing Director of AerData said; “The management of repairs and damages is reliant on data, specifically the records that identify the damage and then support the repair. We have integrated this new tool to enable airlines to centrally manage their repair files, including all the supporting documentation linked from STREAM along with a smart graphical interface.” Wolfgang Kliem, Managing Director of Soft Aviation said; “STREAM is a fully functional records management system that now can be the basis for an airline’s repairs and damages repository. The Repair Map feature can support direct linking with the documentation in STREAM but we have also enabled its ability to integrate with the airline’s MRO IT system to have a seamless link between ‘live’ damages and repairs and STREAM. This will allow airlines to provide third parties with real-time access to repair information on demand.” AERDATA LAUNCHES ‘GEARS’ AIRCRAFT INSPECTION AND AUDIT SOFTWARE MOVING to early March 2014, AerData announced the launch of GEARS, a new software tool, designed to standardize data collection for routine audits and inspections. GEARS (Global Electronic Asset Review System), is a digital tool that can control the quality, consistency and efficiency of data collection by utilizing standard procedures and guidelines. The assigned ‘inspector’ completes a series of pre-defined questions and at the end, based on the answers, multiple reports can be generated and shared. Commenting on the announcement, Vincent van der Gulik, Director, Products and Services, AerData said; “GEARS was developed to address the problem of gathering data in a standardized way for routine audits and inspections. Lessors can deploy their standard audit template in GEARS for technical reps to complete and be sure that the data they collect is the right data, collected in a standardized format. For airlines, the principal is the same. When an airline has Quality Reviews to carry out, they too may utilize GEARS to efficiently manage the data collection and distribution.” He continued; “GEARS is designed to integrate across the AerData product platform, most notably CMS and STREAM. This means that customers who use one or both of these products realize the benefits of automated data transfer from GEARS to CMS as well as document linking from STREAM. This will improve the quality of data entry and reduce the costs and risks normally associated with manual data entry.” GEARS is offered as a stand-alone tool via AerData’s web browser-based Dashboard or integrated with CMS and STREAM if the customer is also subscribing to those AerData products. In addition, AerData can also offer GEARS through AerData Technical Services (ADTS) if customers wish to outsource audits and inspection work MCAP CHOOSE AERDATA’S CMS AND STREAM SOFTWARE PACKAGES STILL in early March 2014, AerData announced that MC Aviation Partners Inc. (MCAP), the commercial aircraft lessor, has chosen AerData’s CMS and STREAM software. CMS (Corporate Management System) is a lease and asset management solution used by the majority of the world’s aircraft, helicopter and engine leasing organizations. Commenting on the announcement, Mark Nieuwendijk, Managing Director of AerData said; “We are delighted to announce that MCAP has selected our services. In the process, MCAP will migrate from their legacy lease management platform to the CMS market standard. In addition, they become another major lessor to standardize its records management with STREAM.” Hiroshi Nakanishi, CEO of MCAP said; “We sought to substantially improve our operating model and key to this was the selection of an appropriate suite of dedicated aircraft leasing tools in CMS and STREAM.” He continued; “The functionality opportunities of both solutions, already proven within the industry and the experience of AerData in migrating data from other systems were the primary requirements for us. However, of equal importance was the partnership approach of AerData in this project.” SMBC AVIATION CAPITAL CHOOSE AERDATA’S STREAM AND GEARS SOFTWARE BY mid-March 2014, AerData was able to announce that SMBC Aviation Capital (SMBC AC), has licensed STREAM aircraft records software and GEARS asset review system. GEARS (Global Electronic Asset Review System), is a total asset review management tool designed with in-field experience and IT to ensure quality, consistency and efficiency in any asset review. Commenting on the announcement, Mark Nieuwendijk, Managing Director of AerData said; “We are delighted to announce that another major lessor has chosen STREAM for the management of its technical documents. It is also a pleasure to see that SMBC AC has chosen GEARS, a product it has been trialing since late last year. GEARS will deliver SMBC AC standardized data collection and reporting across its inspection and audit program in an efficient manner.” Diarmuid Healy, Head of Technical Asset Management, SMBC Aviation Capital AerData progresses on all fronts plus moves to a new office in Ireland Image supplied with kind permission from Soft Aviation
  • 4. MAY/JUNE 2014 | AIRCRAFT IT MRO | NEWS | 9 CLICK HERE FOR FULL SOFTWARE DETAILS AND FOR A DEMO said; “We are pleased to announce our new working relationship with AerData through the use of their STREAM and GEARS systems. These systems will help to streamline processes in our business and assist our ambitious growth plans over the coming years.” WAYPOINT LEASING CHOOSE AERDATA’S CMS AND STREAM SOFTWARE PACKAGES STILL in mid-March 2014, it was announced that Waypoint Leasing, a leading global helicopter leasing company, has chosen AerData to support its leasing and records management as it grows its customer base, takes delivery of new aircraft and expands its business. CMS (Corporate Management System) is a lease and asset management solution used by the majority of the world’s aircraft, helicopter and engine leasing organizations. Commenting on the announcement, Mark Nieuwendijk, Managing Director of AerData, said; “Waypoint is our ideal partner – it is a pioneer in the helicopter leasing industry, dedicated to forming long-term partnerships with operators and sees the value of our services. We are delighted they have chosen two of our core systems, CMS and STREAM, to support their ongoing operations and growth of their business.” David Gorsky, Vice President Operations and Technical, Waypoint Leasing, said, “As a large helicopter leasing company with customers and aircraft all around the world, we regularly invest in infrastructure systems that support our activities and the continuing growth of our business. The powerful combination of both of AerData’s solutions, already proven with major lessors and airlines, met our rigorous requirements. We look forward to building our relationship with AerData and leveraging their expertise for the benefit of our customers.” MINSHENG FINANCIAL LEASING CO. CHOOSE AERDATA’S CMS LEASE MANAGEMENT SOFTWARE IN early April 2014, it was announced that Chinese based financial leasing company, Minsheng Financial Leasing Co., Ltd (MSFL) has chosen AerData’s CMS software. Commenting on the announcement, Paul van Tol, Managing Director of AerData said; “We are delighted to announce another new customer for CMS, this time from the rapidly expanding Chinese leasing industry. MSFL are already a well-established and recognized name in the Asian market and CMS will assist them expand their activities using an industry standard lease and asset management platform.” Zhang Bo, Vice President and Director of Aircraft Leasing Division, MSFL said; “We wanted a straightforward and reliable solution to manage our aircraft leases.” He continued; “AerData was a name recommended to us as the market leader in this area so it was a natural decision to assess the capabilities of CMS, AerData’s IT infrastructure and support. We look forward to growing our portfolio utilizing this solution.” Flatirons Solutions Enters Into Exclusive Support Agreement with EMC for Docato REINFORCES EXPERTISE IN XML-BASED CONTENT LIFECYCLE MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS FLATIRONS Solutions announced in late February 2014 that it has entered into an exclusive agreement with EMC Corporation (EMC) to support and sell the EMC Docato Component Services solution. The agreement includes providing support for existing Docato customers as well as sales and support for new Docato licenses, reflecting Flatirons Solutions’ expertise in XML-based content lifecycle management solutions for aerospace, automotive, electronics, financial services, government, healthcare, and publishing industries. The Docato Component Services solution was part of EMC’s 2007 acquisition of Netherlands-based XHive, which included the XDB database and was integrated into EMC’s Information Intelligence Group (IIG). At that time, EMC notified XHive’s Docato customers that it would end of life the Docato system in 2014. Flatirons Solutions had previously licensed the Docato source code from EMC and uses the XDB/Docato stack in the structured content lifecycle management solutions it provides to its aviation and aerospace customers. “EMC IIG performed a considerable amount of due diligence and has selected Flatirons Solutions, a long-term EMC partner, to continue to support existing Docato licenses and to sell and support new licenses,” said Barry Ruditsky, vice president of OEM sales for EMC’s IIG. “Flatirons Solutions has helped many EMC IIG customers develop solutions for their organizations using Docato. This expertise and Flatirons Solutions’ active customer base using the XDB/Docato stack in production environments afford them a unique position to carry the technology forward.” “The agreement to support EMC’s current Docato customers and carry the Docato platform forward is a reflection of our continued partnership with EMC,” said JD Sillion, chief solutions officer for Flatirons Solutions. “Flatirons Solutions brings more than two decades of content lifecycle management experience to EMC’s Docato customers, a strong foundation upon which we will continue to support and evolve the platform to meet customers’ unique business requirements.”
  • 5. 24 | WHITE PAPER: FLATIRONS | AIRCRAFT IT MRO | MAY/JUNE 2014 Mobility deep dive Mobility is the big thing today but, asks Paul Saunders, Global Product Manager at Flatirons Solutions, where will it go next: what is the current and future state of mobility in aerospace and what about wearable technology?
  • 6. MAY/JUNE 2014 | AIRCRAFT IT MRO | WHITE PAPER: FLATIRONS | 25 THE OTHER DAY my five year old daughter asked me ‘what shape is the Internet: what does it look like?’ I thought for a minute then turned the question back to ask her what shape did she think it is? She felt it would probably be a rectangle (after all, screens are rectangular). It was a good answer but I want to demonstrate in this article that it’s not rectangular but is rather the shape of an engine or an ECU; or it might be an IFE screen or a wrist-worn activity tracker or a watch. Whatever it is, we need to look outside of the rectangle, beyond what we already know, to mobility and where mobility is going for us. BRENDA Let’s start with an example that is well outside of what we do. My mother in law, Brenda, is the grandmother of my children and the worst technophobe. She’s also a writer who has written books which she sells on Amazon plus she does talks… and she decided she needed a website. Instinct suggests that if a family member asks you to build a website, run a mile: it must be like the worst client ever. But actually this turned out to be interesting because Brenda had a really good understanding of what she needed. When we sat down to work out what she needed, she said that it should be a responsive website. I thought that was incredible; a woman who’s a technophobe asking about responsive websites. But she’d thought about it; she understood her audience. Her readers were buying her books and reading them on a Kindle, so her website had to be designed first to work on a Kindle before laptop or tablet formats. But I found it instructive that a grandmother can make IT decisions based on what her users need? WEBSITE PAGES It got me thinking that there are a lot of airlines who, over the last couple of years have done a really good job providing their passengers with what they need in terms of mobility. Most airlines will have a mobile site and will probably have an app that does a good job catering to their consumers from that point of view; but how many have the tools — their portal, their infrastructure, their intranets — where their own internal consumers, their workers who are also mobile, have the same access to a responsive site? WHAT’S CHANGED? In the past couple of years, a lot has changed with technology: we’ve now got a completely different paradigm. With Kindles and iPads, they say that when you go on a train or a plane, whereas people used to talk with each other, they’re now buried in their content. I don’t think that’s completely true as this has always been the case; but the media for content has changed from paper to screen. “…we’ve got a completely different set of expectations about how information is managed, we expect it to be delivered anytime, anywhere on any device and we expect to do it cheaper, faster and better.” CLICK HERE FOR FULL SOFTWARE DETAILS AND FOR A DEMO
  • 7. 26 | WHITE PAPER: FLATIRONS | AIRCRAFT IT MRO | MAY/JUNE 2014 THE FUTURE A look at the future of mobility shows trends and mega trends which, for the purposes of this article, are what I say are mega trends? MEGA TREND #1 TECHNOLOGY DRIVEN NETWORKS AND THE INTERNET OF THINGS The first one is really two trends linked together: technology driven networks and the Internet of things. Traditionally the Internet is built up of data entered by humans, i.e. if you flew a sector, you’d write a techlog, sign it off and it would get faxed back to base. Now we have eTechlogs; again manually driven but there’s also engine condition monitoring and other automated functions. Remember what I said earlier, the Internet is no longer ‘rectangular’ but it’s the shape of components. Technology driven networks are the opposite of bureaucratic hierarchies. Whereas we used to pick up paper documents to find out where we were and where to go, we now simply tap into one of many technology driven networks to find hotels, restaurants, places to go… anything: going beyond where we would normally have gone to find information. This is going to be big in our industry. Even today, if a programmer wants to find out about a particular line of code, they Google it: they don’t read the manual. This is how things work today; this is how the Internet works: everybody Googles stuff. We don’t do that in our industry if something goes wrong with our aircraft we go and phone technical services and, if they don’t know, they’ll read the manual; and if that doesn’t know they’ll phone the OEM and two days later you might get an answer back while, all the time, the aircraft’s been grounded. But people are starting to work around that; Skyping colleagues and so on. We’re going to embrace mobility and the Internet of things and use technology driven networks to help us do that. I don’t know what it will finally look like but that’s what’s going to happen. MEGA TREND #2 IDENTITY Identity is a big issue, and there are two things to consider… Identity is a really precious commodity and people don’t take very good care of other people’s identity on the Internet, e.g. NSA, GCHQ. But we’re going to start taking seriously what happens to our own identity on line so we need to think about how identity is used for employees and the implications of that because in the same way that advertisers can target you on the Internet and can have cookies saved that help them target you in advertising and things like that, we’re going to want to do the same with employees in terms of things like time booking, rostering, pairing. The other thing we’re going to see a lot more of is CREATE, DELIVER, CONSUME Back in the day, we had paper systems to create, deliver and consume content; and the aim was to deliver the right information at the right time to the right people. Whether it’s about producing manuals, getting them to the pilots by whatever means of delivery was used, getting them to hubs, engineers or getting training material; it’s always been about creating the right content and delivering it to the right people to consume in the way they want to. In today’s mobile age, the consumer age, we’ve got a completely different set of expectations about how information is managed, we expect it to be delivered anytime, anywhere on any device and we expect to do it cheaper, faster and better. That’s how the paradigm shift has manifested. HARDWARE Let’s look at what’s going on with hardware. Remember the mantra! ‘If you want it bad: iPad. If you’re happy to wait: Windows 8.’ I first wrote this about two years ago (see Aircraft IT volume 1, issue 6 September 2012) and it was the case then that the iPad had the software; the likes of Jeppesen and Lido were early adopters and there was a whole pile of other applications coming out for iPad at the time. On the horizon we had Windows 8, seen as the silver bullet that would allow us to do everything, everywhere on every device… everything that we had always wanted. Well, the situation still is, I believe, ‘If you want it bad: iPad. If you’re happy to wait: Windows 8.’ We’ve got a lot of choice with iPad and not quite so much choice with Windows 8 but there have been announcements from the likes of Delta and some other airlines that they’re looking at Windows 8. It seems that, if you’re running a project or you’re a pilot or an engineer, and you’re leading that project, you’ll probably go for the sexy consumer product, the iPad. If you’re in IT and you’re used to dealing with legacy enterprise systems like Active Directory, Citrix and all the stuff that users hate, you’ll probably choose Windows. Whatever you want to do and however you want to do it, it’s all about the use case. People ask whether they should have Windows or iPad or Android and it’s never an easy answer because it’s always about the use case. There’s a lot of interesting technology on the market now. Samsung with Android have every kind of form factor from under 2” for the Smart Gear watch through 7 inch and 10 inch tablets, right up to 20” monster devices. In Europe, Panasonic have done really well in the last year or so with a couple of big airline sales where people have chosen the 10” or 7” Toughpad but while I can see the appeal of these expensive ruggedized devices, I’m not sure of the need for them. The data on attrition rates, even for iPads, are really low because if you give employees something they enjoy using and allow them to put personal content on as well as company stuff, they’re going to take good care of it. THE iPAD IS A MACGUFFIN As well as being all about the use case, it doesn’t matter what device you have because introducing the iPad changed this small sector of aerospace IT in a way nobody would have expected five years ago. This new device wasn’t what the sector was about but it was a plot device, a way to allow us to embrace consumerism, to embrace sexy user experiences and user interfaces and to embrace mobility with all those good things that users want. It wasn’t about going to the Apple Store and buying an iPad, because we could have gone and got a Microsoft Surface for next to nothing from Microsoft if that was what we wanted or we could have got a nice cheap Galaxy Tablet from Samsung. But because the iPad had shown us the way in terms of what consumer technology could do within our industry, it allowed us to do these things which software vendors were forced to embrace as well and provide sexy user experiences, fantastic mobility and things like that. In the world of cinema, they’d call such a plot device a MacGuffin. Everybody needs to be prepared to deliver anything, anywhere on any device. “The data on attrition rates, even for iPads, are really low because if you give employees something they enjoy using and allow them to put personal content on as well as company stuff, they’re going to take good care of it.”
  • 8. MAY/JUNE 2014 | AIRCRAFT IT MRO | WHITE PAPER: FLATIRONS | 27 where an electronic signature is used. There’s a whole slew of ways an electronic signature can be included and the whole integrity behind that. Our industry’s built on integrity… high quality, high integrity very knowledgeable people. And as we try to build a leaner industry, conserve costs and resources there’s effort to deskill elements of our business and this whole identity thing is becoming a greater concern because we don’t want to be the guy who signs off on the aircraft that falls out of the sky somewhere. Identity will be a big thing. Again, I don’t know what it’s going to look like but we need to see it coming. Technology OEMs are doing a lot of work in terms of capturing identity through biometrics. The latest generation iPhone has a finger print scanner: we can see a lot of wearable technology as well, designed to help identify things (see below). MEGA TREND #3 MACHINE LEARNING The last mega trend is associated with Machine Learning. A couple of years ago this might have been described as artificial intelligence but that term implies something that isn’t there. However, there’s a lot of research and development going on with machine learning in organizations like ours (Flatirons Solutions) and such as Boeing and Airbus where systems are being a lot more pre-emptive about what’s going on, about what people need. At the moment if you’re going through an IPC (illustrated parts catalog) and you type in a part number, you might have to select ‘I’m searching for a part number’ or similar. In the future, MRO systems will behave a lot more like Google; you’ll just type something in and the system will recognise it as being a part number rather than, say, a serial number. There’s a lot of work being done on machine learning which will impact on mobility in a big way. PREDICTIONS THAT ARE NOT THE FUTURE WEARABLE TECHNOLOGY Wearable technology, like Google Glass, seems to be technology for the sake of it plus, in our industry, raises security and privacy issues. It might be interesting to track where your employees are, what they’re doing, capturing time and attendance automatically but we’re not embracing that kind of stuff right now using cheaper technology like RFID. Wearable technology is probably a few years off — Forrester says 2024 for the business sector. It might be quite big from a consumer point of view in next couple of years but it’s hard to see a viable use case in our industry. In closing, I’m reminded that we always need an acronym, so here is mine to help you remember the key things to do with mobility. I’ve called it ‘Be like Brenda’ Be like Brenda and think about a… Responsive design; Embrace the internet of things — all the stuff delivering data to you; and say… No to google glass, there’s no need for it; Don’t underestimate identity; and, finally, we need to think about mobility for… Any device, any platform — delivering anything, anywhere. PAUL SAUNDERS GLOBAL PRODUCT MANAGER, FLATIRON SOLUTIONS Paul is a trusted technology specialist who has been working for and advising MROs, airline operators, OEMs, and software vendors since 1998. He has unparalleled expertise in aviation software design and mobility, having worked on apps used by pilots and engineers all over the world. Often called upon for speaking and writing engagements, Paul is a regular contributor to AircraftIT Operations eJournal, Aviation Week, and other publications. When it comes to the adoption of emerging technology in aerospace, particularly with regards to mobility, Paul is a heavy weight visionary and geek. Paul joined the TechSight/X team in September 2013 and serves as a global product manager spearheading flight operations, training and mobile solutions. He is currently based in the UK. INTERACTIVE ASK THE AUTHOR A QUESTION CLICK HERE TO LEAVE YOUR QUESTION INTERACTIVE JOIN THE DEBATE CLICK HERE TO LEAVE YOUR FEEDBACK ABOUT THIS ARTICLE AND START OR JOIN A DISCUSSION FLATIRONS SOLUTIONS Flatirons Solutions provides information management consulting services and solutions for Fortune 500 and other companies in the aviation and aerospace, enterprise, government, high-tech, and publishing and media industries — helping customers deliver the right information, at the right time, to the right people. The TechSight/X suite of products is an independent solution for technical information management developed specifically for the aerospace industry to create, manage, and deliver large volumes technical information in support of the production, operation, and maintenance of aircraft throughout their lifecycle. Wearable Technology MAYBE it’s because the genre is a derivative of the Bluetooth headset, a fashion accessory, it seems, reserved for the worst kind of loudmouth sales trolls, or because I’m just getting old and cantankerous, but I simply don’t get wearable technology. If the adoption of mobility in the work place has taught us anything it is that investing in a new technology without any real understanding of how it should be used is a waste of time and effort. There are some appealing examples of very niche use cases, such as with assisting medical surgery or with helping those with disabilities, but I’m struggling to understand the wider consumer or business appeal for this kind of technology. Virgin Atlantic recently announced that they were experimenting with how Google Glass could enhance passenger experience, presumably in order to more efficiently access company CRM systems. This kind of forced innovation doesn’t represent a leap forward in customer experience, it just creeps me out at the thought of the overbearing invasion of privacy. Sure, we would all like for flight attendants to know our drinks preference, but whatever happened to just talking to customers? Also, the idea of tracking employees and assets via RFID tags and other near field communication methods is not a new one. What activity trackers offer is an active device which can log in detail movements and activities whilst automatically synching with management software. This kind of device can offer much more scope than a passive RFID tag and could be used for more detailed activity and location tracking. It has implications for time booking, identity and location use cases. However personnel tracking can be a divisive subject for the work force and unions alike. I’m all for improving efficiencies of tracking resources, but as the cheaper RFID technology has not been widely adopted I don’t hold any hope for wearable activity trackers in the very near future. Part of the problem with the current crop of wearable technology devices is platform fragmentation. At present there is no single go-to platform for wearable device manufacturers and developers. Google are addressing this with the recent announcement of an Android software development kit for wearable devices, there are even rumours of Apple expanding their ecosystem in iOS8 to include health related apps which would suggest the embracing of wearable technology. This will see improved interconnectivity between devices and use case innovation. Forrester claim in a recent report that wearable technology is scheduled to become pervasive in the business world by 2024. But with current privacy concerns, security implications and a near to non-existent eco-system there will need to be some major re-imagination of wearable technology in the next few years in order to convince me of a viable future in the business. “…if a programmer wants to find out about a particular line of code, they Google it: they don’t read the manual. This is how things work today; this is how the Internet works: everybody Googles stuff.”
  • 9. INTERACTIVE: GET INVOLVED! Why not get involved with the debate? Send your comments or questions to Michael by clicking here. How I see IT In the age of Netflix and GoGo, why isn’t aircraft data real? Michael Denis For the first time since 2001, I missed Aviation Week’s #MROAMevent: it was to attend the Abu Dhabi Global Aerospace Summit#ADG14; definitely the right choice. The Summit is an invitation only, biannual forum bringingtogether international senior executives from across theaerospace, aviation and space sectors for four days of thoughtleadership and future growth strategies. Abu Dhabi has squarelyestablished itself as the ‘Davos of aviation’, along with Seattleand Toulouse, where CxOs come to set the vision and agendafor the future. Common themes repetitively highlighted on theopen panels included manufacturing technology innovationssuch as additive 3D printing, advancements in air traffic control,leaning and synchronizing manufacturing and MRO networks, andpartnerships for collaboration. AIMING FOR THE MOON A highlight of the Summit that everyone was talking about wasDr. Buzz Aldrin’s impassioned keynote presentation of the Apollospace program as the benchmark of what can be accomplishedwhen government and industry partner and set definitive goalswith specific timelines. During Dr. Aldrin’s speech, I couldn’thelp but think about the chasm between conquering putting aman on the moon in a decade, over four decades ago, versusour industry’s current inability for two airlines with differentIT systems to simply exchange a visit package, task cards,maintenance records, or real-time performance data even afterdecades of industry standardization efforts. Information technology and the role of #AeroIT in enablinglean manufacturing, service parts optimization, labor productivity,mobility, etc… was the least directly discussed topic by far. LESSONS FROM DISASTER In the hallways, there were also considerable discussions aboutMalaysia MH370; what happened, would we ever find the aircraft,and what the ramifications for the industry will be, mainlyaround ‘real time’ aircraft performance data communicationsand combining the lessons learned and recommendations fromAir France AF447. Mary Schreivo, ex FAA Inspector General turned CNNcommentator recently said, “The importance of accidents toregulations in the United States [is significant]. We call the FAAthe tombstone agency … because they [regulate] by countingtombstones. And that’s not… being flippant because, in fact, theyhave to do a cost-benefit analysis before they put forth anyregulation.” Some believe the loss of MH370 is a seminal eventthat will change the industry. THE MEANING OF ‘REAL’ Real time’ data communications isn’t a technology challenge; itisn’t a cost issue, although some airlines may argue it should be.Preventing another AF447 or MH370 is simply a matter of will.Synonyms for ‘real’ are ‘genuine’, ‘authentic’, ‘factual’, ‘valid’ and‘true’. Because of airworthiness, we expect aircraft data to bereal – just not necessarily real time, real interoperable, or realstandard. Data, information, content, and knowledge are the oilsthat lubricate the system of systems that ensures airworthiness,as well as improves product lifecycles, supply networks, aircraftdispatch rates and asset utilization; ultimately improving thepassenger experience and cost. Which returns me to my opening question; ‘In the age of Netflixon-demand video and GoGo in flight WiFi, why isn’t aircraftdata real time and real seamlessly interoperable?’ Maybe by the next Global Aerospace Summit in 2016, aircraft datawill be real. At least that’s how I’d like to see IT. “Real time’ data communications isn’t a technology challenge; it isn’t a cost issue, although some airlines may argue it should be.” MAY/JUNE 2014 | AIRCRAFT IT MRO | WHITE PAPER: 2MoRO | 31
  • 10. CONSULTING | TECHNOLOGY | OUTSOURCING Delays cost the airline industry $5 billion annually. Does your mobile solution improve dispatch rates? TechSight/X mobile solutions for Android, iPad, and Windows tablets improve labor productivity, helping you return aircraft to active revenue- generating service dependably. Contact Flatirons Solutions to discover more.