Înapoi la știri

United Airlines flight to Spain pulls U-turn, apparently over Bluetooth device name - NPR

1 oră în urmă
4 minute min
Simona Stan
In this July 18, 2018, file photo, United Airlines commercial jets sit at a gate at Terminal C of Newark Liberty International Airport in Newark, N.J. Julio Cortez/AP hide caption Stay up to date with our Up First newsletter, sent every weekday morning. A United Airlines flight from Newark, N.J., to Palma de Mallorca, Spain, pulled a U-turn late Saturday over what appears to have been a suspiciously named Bluetooth device on board. Flight tracking data shows that the flight, which should have landed in Spain after a nearly eight-hour flight, instead returned to Newark after 4 hours and 24 minutes in the air. Your Money Short flights are popular. Will they last? United Airlines told NPR via email that the flight turned around "to address a potential security concern." Multiple posts on social media from self-identified passengers indicate that the problem was a Bluetooth device on board the plane. Several of those passengers posted photos or videos of them on board the flight or in the airport, with timestamps that match the flight's actual schedule. Middle East conflict Airlines in Europe slash thousands of flights as Iran war cuts jet fuel supplies Some passengers knew little more than that the flight attendants had asked passengers to turn off their Bluetooth devices. One post referenced in-flight announcements with "lots of comments like 'this little joke is ruining it for everyone.' " Audio from air traffic control, archived by LiveATC.net, sheds a little more light on the situation. One voice on the recording asked what had happened with the flight, which had recently landed back at Newark and remained on the tarmac. Global Health The biggest permanent desert lake threatens with rising waters and hungry crocs Politics What it means to be a man is a theme in Texas Senate race as Paxton attacks Talarico "There's a security detail out there, someone had a Bluetooth speaker and they named it a certain four-letter word," another voice responded. "So they have to inspect the whole aircraft including the cargo area passengers have to evacuate." "Four-letter word," in this case, doesn't appear to refer to a curse word, but rather a different four-letter word that triggered airline security procedures. "There is an active Bluetooth network labeled 'BOMB,' " one self-identified passenger wrote on TikTok. (She shared a video of herself drinking sangria, geotagged to Palma de Mallorca, after the flight finally arrived.) Another Reddit post of someone who claimed to be the spouse of a passenger similarly reported that the word in question was "bomb" and that the device was a teenager's speaker. The flight eventually reboarded and landed in Palma de Mallorca at 3:47 p.m. local time on Sunday, about 9 and a half hours late.
Alte postari din Economie
Economie

Why Dell Stock Skyrocketed to a New All-Time High Today - Yahoo Finance

Shares of Dell Technologies (DELL +32.76%) soared on Friday after the computer maker delivered a blockbuster earnings report. Shares of Dell Technologies (DELL +32.76%) soared on Friday after the computer maker delivered a blockbuster earnings report.

Economie

How Ferrari bungled the design of its first EV - The Verge

For nearly 80 years, Ferrari occupied a unique cultural space where its cars were aspirational, even for people who resented those who could afford them. The price, the exclusivity, and the opacity of the buying process allowed Ferrari to sail above ordinary criticism.

Economie

Musk abandoned his own ‘solar electric economy’ to burn gas for an AI chatbot no one uses - Electrek

Elon Musk spent years telling the world that solar power was the obvious answer to Earth’s energy needs — that a small patch of desert could power the entire United States. Now, he’s burning millions of tons of fossil fuels to run an AI chatbot that has lost 60% of its downloads, selling the unused compute to a company he called “misanthropic and evil” three months ago, and pitching space-based solar panels right as SpaceX files for a $2 trillion IPO.

Acasa Recente Radio Județe