“Get off the iPad!” warns air traffic control as Spirit flight nears Air Force One

4 days ago 18

A minute later, the controller reached out with contact information for the Boston-area air traffic control center that would handle the Spirit plane's descent and landing. (134.0 is the frequency for DXR 19, the control group which handles traffic coming out of the New York metro area and heading into Boston.)

"Spirit 1300: Boston Center, 134.0."

After no immediate response, the controller chastised the pilots again.

"I gotta talk to you twice every time," he said, then repeated: "Boston 134.0."

When Spirit 1300 finally acknowledged the frequency, the controller got in one final dig before passing them on.

"Pay attention!" he said. "Get off the iPad!"

We have no idea if the Spirit pilots were actually distracted by an iPad, of course, but tablets have been essential to pilots for years. As far back as 2019, a trade publication noted that, "in aviation, iPads are to pilots what cellphones are to drivers. While many of us learned how to fly without an iPad, we now can’t imagine flying without it. It has become our source of weather data, our flight planner, our notam checker, our weight and balance calculator, and our map—all in one. While it has the power to make us radically more informed, organized, and safer, iPads, like cellphones, have considerable drawbacks when not used thoughtfully."

The Spirit plane landed safely in Boston.

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