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Sunday, December 28, 2014

Commerical Airlines Slow To Adopt New Safety Technology

Less than ten months after the loss of Malaysia flight 370, the airline industry has been hit with yet another missing plane.

Early Sunday morning AirAsia flight QZ8501 disappeared from radar with 162 people on board in airspace possibly thick with dense storm clouds, strong winds and lightning, officials said. Aircraft searching for AirAsia Flight 8501 called off the effort for the night and will resume at Monday morning, said Achmad Toha of Indonesia’s search and rescue agency. Some ships were continuing the search overnight, he said.

It is still unknown whether AirAsia flight QZ8501 had been equipped with FLYHT aerospace solutions advanced communications and AFIRS(Automated Flight Information Reporting System)equipment.

FLYHT provides proprietary technological products and services designed to reduce costs and improve efficiencies in the airline industry. The Company has patented and commercialized three products and associated services currently marketed to airlines, manufacturers and maintenance organizations around the world. Its premier technology, AFIRS™ UpTime™, allows airlines to monitor and manage aircraft operations anywhere, anytime, in real time. If an aircraft encounters an emergency, FLYHT’s triggered data streaming mode, FLYHTStream™, automatically streams vital data, normally secured in the black box, to designated sites on the ground in real-time. The Dragon is FLYHT’s latest product, a revolutionary light weight portable satellite communications device that blends existing FLYHT technology with that of the iPad.