Operating System on 747

Azndude51

Platinum Member
Sep 26, 2004
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Well, I just came back from China where I was attending my grandmother's funeral. When I was leaving the 747 that I was riding, I noticed that all the TV monitors and projectors were displaying a black screen with white words, then I noticed a little penguin, so appearently, they use Linux on the video players on planes.
 

Sunner

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
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I hope they use some in house software designed explicitly for the purpose.
Somehow I'd trust that over Windows or Linux.
 

drag

Elite Member
Jul 4, 2002
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Originally posted by: STaSh
Boeing is one of Microsoft's largest customers.


Boeing is one of the largest customers for all sorts of people...

Mostly I'd bet that it's embedded-style software designed to work with a paticular componate and all of it is networked together in the airplane. Lots of different componates talking to each other.. That sort of thing.

Probably won't have any normal OS stuff like what we'd use unless some techs use diagnosis software on laptops or something like that.

Also keep in mind that the 747 has been around since the late 60's with many of the machines in the air today have been in operation for many many years... There is probably going to be software dating from the early 80's on many machines...
 

Nothinman

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Sep 14, 2001
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I hope they use some in house software designed explicitly for the purpose.

Having dealt with internal developers where I work, I really would not trust my life to their software.
 

Sunner

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
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Originally posted by: Nothinman
I hope they use some in house software designed explicitly for the purpose.

Having dealt with internal developers where I work, I really would not trust my life to their software.

Not that I'm in the know, but I'd hope that Boeing(and Airbus, Lockheed, etc) have quite an extensive QA process, compared to any "general purpose" company out there.
 

drag

Elite Member
Jul 4, 2002
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There is some weird things.

for instance in the software used on Boeing 777's as much as 60% was written in Ada because Boeing engineers liked it and dictated that as thelanguage for much of the software.. They use a combination of commercial-of-the-shelf software and custom software built under contract.
http://www.stsc.hill.af.mil/crosstalk/1996/01/Boein777.asp

That's a bit old, though. 1996
 

n0cmonkey

Elite Member
Jun 10, 2001
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Originally posted by: drag
There is some weird things.

for instance in the software used on Boeing 777's as much as 60% was written in Ada because Boeing engineers liked it and dictated that as thelanguage for much of the software.. They use a combination of commercial-of-the-shelf software and custom software built under contract.
http://www.stsc.hill.af.mil/crosstalk/1996/01/Boein777.asp

That's a bit old, though. 1996

I'm sure Boeing hires plenty of ex-military programmers.
 

n0cmonkey

Elite Member
Jun 10, 2001
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Originally posted by: Sunner
Originally posted by: Nothinman
I hope they use some in house software designed explicitly for the purpose.

Having dealt with internal developers where I work, I really would not trust my life to their software.

Not that I'm in the know, but I'd hope that Boeing(and Airbus, Lockheed, etc) have quite an extensive QA process, compared to any "general purpose" company out there.

Airbus scares me.
 

uOpt

Golden Member
Oct 19, 2004
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A lot of airline software was been written once, when the airlines were early adaptors of these computers thingies, in the 50ies and 60ties and has not been replaced since.
 

stash

Diamond Member
Jun 22, 2000
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I bet if you saw an A380 and a 747-400 next to each other, you would be able to tell a difference ;)