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pilot training

Boston Researchers Present Study Showing Working Memory Training In School Can Help Students With Attention Deficits 22 November 2007
 

Dr. Enrico Mezzacappa, assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard University, has presented findings from a pilot project studying the effectiveness of using Cogmed Working Memory Training in the classroom to improve attention in children with ADHD. The research was conducted in the Boston school system and builds on previous findings from Sweden's Karolinska Institute that revealed a breakthrough in the way attention problems are understood and treated. [click link for full article]

 
 
Kids! Do NOT try using a training aid at home! 23 November 2007
 

One afternoon, this programmer pilot fish suddenly discovers he can't log into the development database. None of his co-workers can either, so fish grabs a training aid and goes looking for the source of the problem.

 
 
General Aviation Chatter :: RE: Rand Airport 01 January 0001
 

Author: agriffiths Posted: Sat Nov 17, 2007 11:43 pm (GMT 2) Topic Replies: 34 Rand is not only a commercial airfield but a training airfield and therefore the levels of pilot/student pilot experience varies. We should all remember what it was like trying to get into a circuit when we only had a few hours under our belt. Most of us did not have to contend with this amount of traffic when we did our PPL. Having said that I think there are a couple of elements that must be understood/investigated. 1) ATC: a) As at Wonderboom (some time ago, not sure if this still happens) there are specific times when practice circuits can be performed. This should be investigated. b) Since there is ongoing training, the ATC should accomodate these new aviators with a little more ernest. (what is a student going to feel if the only guidence he has is stressed.) c) Decide on how many aircraft can be safely accomodated in the circuit, and chase the rest out to a holding point. I regularly get chased away from Wonderboom..... but at least when I come into the circuit I have more than enough space to do my thing and then some, in case of an emergency. 2)PIC: a) If we arrived at an unmanned airfield to find it congested, we would divert to a safe area and orbit until the area is cleared. Since we as PIC's have more say in the air than the ATC's, it is our right/responsibility to do the same. Lets go back to basics. Change to rands frequency, listen out, take a decision. Lets not rush into a circuit and end up on the ground in a mess. b)Student Pilots- please identify your selves as such. It is not a shame to be a student. In fact you get right of way over and above the rest of us if you call as such. It allows other pilots to accomodate you and they will in most cases be more than willing to assist you. We all want you to become pilots and not dead student pilots. Again all of us were there. (in my case i still feel like Im there...but thats another story). A WISE MAN ONCE SAID "NEVER RUSH TO AN AIRCRAFT, TAKE YOUR TIME" Well I think that can also be said for entering a circuit. And if in doubt, pull out. If you feel the circuit is too busy for your liking, extend your down wind and pull out of the circuit and try again. Rather have the piss pulled out of you, than you pulled out of a burning wreck. Sorry for the long winded lecture, but it is close to my heart. _________________I hate gravity....empty fuel tanks....MPI's.....TBO's.....and Toilet stops, They all put me on the ground...

 
 
Military plane crashes, pilot survives 01 January 0001
 

A military pilot escaped with minor injuries Monday after his plane crashed while on a training flight in central Turkey, the Anatolia news agency reported.The F-5, which took off from an air base

 
 
PILOT EJECTS HIMSELF OUT OF PLANE AND SURVIVES CRASH 01 January 0001
 

SEREFLIKOCHISAR (A.A) - A pilot ejected himself out of a military training plane and survived the crash near Sereflikochisar town of capital Ankara on Monday.

 
 
MILITARY TRAINING PLANE CRASHES, PILOT SURVIVES 01 January 0001
 

SEREFLIKOCHISAR (A.A) - A training plane of the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK) crashed near Sereflikochisar town of capital Ankara on Monday.

 
 
Turkish military training plane crashes, pilot injured 12 November 2007
 

ANKARA, Turkey : A Turkish military plane crashed Monday in central Turkey, injuring the pilot, the state-run Anatolia news agency said. via International Herald Tribune

 
 
Turkish military pilot survives crash 12 November 2007
 

The pilot was force to eject after his aircraft got into difficulties after taking off from a military base in the central province of Konya on a training mission. The crash occurred close to a large salt lake near to Sereflikochisar. The pilot was

 
 
123.45 :: RE: Nationwide Jokes 01 January 0001
 

Author: Rotor kop Subject: Re: Nationwide Posted: Sat Nov 10, 2007 10:23 pm (GMT 2) Topic Replies: 42 pcrodd wrote: Hi Gents, Taking the 'micky' out of incidents like this is par for the course. Applause should be given to the level of training extant at Nationwide that said pilot put the bird down with no casualties The bird is unfortunately in feathers _________________To fly is Heavenly, but to HOVER is Divine I'm not driving fast - i'm flying low

 
 
Companies tap RSS to tame info overload 30 October 2007
 

As employees struggle to read an increasing amount of work-related material, some companies have turned to RSS (Really Simple Syndication) technology to improve productivity.With RSS servers and readers designed for workplaces, IT departments set up internal information feeds that employees can subscribe to, a delivery mechanism that, for some information, can be more precise and effective than e-mail."The first problem we see addressed regularly with enterprise RSS systems is e-mail overload. Most knowledge workers these days are just about completely fed up with e-mail," said Oliver Young, a Forrester Research analyst.An enterprise RSS system is ideal for delivering the type of information employees need to know about, but not necessarily act on right away, Young said.RSS keeps need-to-know information out of the e-mail channel, which for most people is "a need-to-do task list sort of thing," Young said.Often those need-to-know e-mails -- such as a corporate benefits update or a newsletter -- end up getting deleted or ignored, even though employees recognize that they may contain potentially important information.For example, a company could post human resource messages and documents on the intranet's human resources section and send RSS alerts with the appropriate links, instead of blasting out the information via mass e-mails.RSS feeds became popular initially as a convenient way for Web publishers to alert their readers about new articles and changed information on their sites.Using consumer-grade RSS readers such as those from Google and Bloglines, people quickly check what's new on their favorite sites without having to visit them.Inevitably, people started using RSS readers at work, creating potential problems for IT departments in areas such as security and user support.Seeing an opportunity, vendors such as Attensa, NewsGator, and KnowNow developed on-premise, behind-the-firewall RSS software for workplaces.Unlike consumer RSS readers, these vendors' systems can be integrated with existing corporate directories and security frameworks, giving IT departments control over employees' RSS use.IBM's Lotus and Microsoft have started to add RSS capabilities to their respective collaboration and communication platforms, but their feature sets don't match the functionality of enterprise RSS vendors' systems, Young said.The Union Bank of California hopes that enterprise RSS can help it tame an internal communications overload.About 80 bank groups, from such areas as public relations, marketing, sales, product management, and operations, hit employees with a steady stream of mass e-mails, all-hands voice mails, printed literature, and intranet additions."We discovered that about half of the messages being delivered via these methods weren't appropriate to the people [receiving them], so we definitely needed to do something," said James Penn, the bank's vice president of interactive marketing and communications.For example, the bank realized that salespeople, deluged with often irrelevant information, often fall behind learning about the bank's latest offers and promotions, affecting their ability to pitch them at customers.Union Bank is now in the pilot phase of an implementation of an enterprise RSS system from KnowNow, which it expects to eventually roll out to its about 10,000 employees.The bank is creating very specific RSS feeds and defining the target audience for each one so that employees will receive fewer but more relevant messages.While the project will initially focus on improving internal communications, Union Bank may later link up the RSS system with its CRM system, as well as allow employees to subscribe to external data feeds, Penn said.At the U.K. National Health Service (NHS) division in Orkney, Scotland, the IT department has significantly cut down on e-mail overload with a NewsGator enterprise RSS system, said David Rendall, a computer programmer involved in the project.At NHS Orkney, few of the 600 or so users -- mostly doctors, nurses, physical therapists, and business administrators -- are technically savvy. So Rendall has reached out to departments and held frequent training sessions to promote the RSS system's use."The biggest challenge is helping people make the switch and get their heads around the new RSS paradigm," Rendall said.This user indifference and ignorance, coupled with e-mail familiarity, is a common barrier to RSS adoption in workplaces, according to Forrester's Young."While most people have a love-hate relationship with e-mail, it's easy to use and very convenient to [copy] your entire office to make sure you get everyone involved," Young said.This is why Young recommends starting RSS deployments within specific groups in an organization and with the purpose of improving a specific communication issue."Where I see most enterprise RSS solutions starting to fall down is when you're trying to encourage or bring a whole host of workers along all at once," Young said.In addition to reducing e-mail, enterprise RSS systems often boost organizations' use of intranets, blogs, and wikis by alerting employees to changes and additions, Young said.At NHS Orkney, the NewsGator system lets employees subscribe to feeds from the organization's blogs and wikis, thus increasing their readership and boosting collaboration and communication, Rendall said.Meanwhile, Union Bank trusts RSS will improve its intranet, currently being redesigned. "There are many applications for which we could use the intranet as a repository, and leverage RSS for distribution and change alerts," Penn said.Specifically, RSS could help with notifying Union Bank employees about modifications to policies and procedures. This is key for banks, which are highly regulated by the government."Often a little nuance of a policy will change, and while not applicable to 90 percent of the employees, it's crucial for the 10 percent who need to know," he said.Not to be overlooked is the ability of enterprise RSS systems to give managers a clear view into how popular blogs, wikis, external sites, and intranet sections are with employees, Young said."Because it's all coming into one central location, you can do very advanced analytics on who is reading what," Young said.For example, if half of the sales team subscribes to one specific journal's feed, it might make sense to suggest the feed to the other half. "It really helps information spread more quickly and best practices to proliferate across the enterprise," he said.Likewise, it makes it easy to spot skunks. "If your CEO's blog has no one reading it, you know pretty quickly there's a problem there," Young said.

 
 

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