it's a boeing in case you're wondering https://finance.yahoo.com/news/boeing-stock-plummets-after-air-india-plane-crash-120138157.html
Fuuuuuuuuck I was about to blindly post "I'll bet 10 grand it was a Boeing." Ofc it's a Boeing rofl. Look guys the Boeing shareholder meeting is coming to town ๐ช๐คก ๐๐คก๐ฉ!!!
I actually cannot imagine being an engineer and willingly taking a job at Boeing. "Yeah so I paid for my degree and don't actually have any engineering skills. Perfect you're hired."
I continue to be amazed they're still allowed to fly.
That's the power of monopoly baybeeeee!
I mean Boeing is a huge percentage of commercial aircraft, so of course it's a Boeing. It's like when you hear about an electric vehicle exploding, of course it's a Tesla, but that doesn't necessarily mean it was a design flaw. (Though fuck Tesla, they sucked way before people realized Musk sucks.)
The plane involved was a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, delivered to Air India in 2014, according to the aviation tracking site FlightRadar24.
Is aviation getting more dangerous? Anyone in the field know? We've had multiple crashes this year when we had gone multiple years without a fatal crash in the 2010s.
Not in the field, but I think it depends. It's for sure more dangerous on average if we consider the entire world, but I feel like that's mostly because of certain areas (US w/ toothless FAA and ATC shortage, Russia with the war&part shortages etc, ...) and new Boeing aircraft.
Flying is still the safest mode of travel per km, and if you're flying Airbus/Embraer/COMAC/pre-2010 Boeing it's likely as safe as it was a decade ago. However it kinda sucks due to all the greenhouse gas emissions.
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