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Recently in Articles Category

Week on the Web

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Flight International issue 25-31 August 2009

Be honest, who really takes notice of those safety demonstrations before takeoff?

Charter operator Thomson Airways knows this and has come up with a way to get passengers to sit up and pay attention by using children as cabin crew giving the instructions, which is all very heart-warming and actually very effective.

Check out Kieran Daly's blog post pointing to Boston Globe's 40 "fabulous" aviation pictures.

It's a spectacular selection, including an impressive shot of a hot-air balloon above the clouds in Germany and a helicopter, with tourists onboard, in front of Angel Falls at Canaima National Park.

Read about the Su-27 fighter jet that disappeared behind trees at Poland's Radom air show recently and burst into flames killing both pilots and view a newsclip of its aerial display.

Twitter user, RAFairman uploaded an image showing part of an aircraft and challenged followers to guess its type.

Our very own Stefan the Pilot was the winner guessing correctly that the image was of a Westland Wessex helicopter.

See more of the Wessex, once described by Flight International as the "world's largest VTOL aircraft".

Follow Stefan on Twitter... He's going to be busy over the next few months.

Westland Wessex http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1969/1969%20-%200819.html?search=westland%20wessex

See Stefan the Pilot's images in his own gallery 

 

Week on the Web is also available as an audio podcast on AirSpace and iTunes. 

To guest edit Flightglobal may well have been a dream come true for Sir Richard Branson. He had wanted to be a journalist when he was at school in Stowe, so at the tender age of 16 he set up a student magazine.

 

But yesterday's guest editorship was no child's play.

 

Providing commentary on the day's new agenda; selecting iconic images for the Image of the Day blog; blogging about industry issues on this blog, answering your questions and choosing a competition winner to fly anywhere on the Virgin network.

 

During the day, we learned how he has a strong focus on keeping a healthy work/life balance by spending as much free time on his own private island, Necker, near Costa Rica with his family.

 

On a typical day, he could be spanning a couple of continents with a breakfast meeting in Tokyo, enjoying a business lunch in the South of France, and racing to the UK in time to have afternoon tea with his mother.

 

Sir Richard on the blog 

As Flightglobal's guest editor he shared his views of the current state of the industry in his own Guest Editor's blog.

 

He said: "Everything has been thrown at our industry - volatile oil, swine flu, recession, environmental pressure, higher government taxes.

 

"What next? We're clearly at a tipping point. The next 12 months will determine how our industry looks for the longer-term..."

 

And he wrote another blog post about the British Airways and American Airlines merger whose "plans to effectively merge are not going according to plan".


Sir Richard as gatekeeper

He chose the lead stories throughout the day and wrote a short sentence justifying his decisions.

 

His lead story choices, unsurprisingly, reflected his interests in the airline industry. Airline CEOs will have logged on to Flightglobal in the morning to find that IATA announced, at its AGM in Kuala Lumpur, that it had revised its airline financial forecast for 2009 to a global loss of $9 billion, almost double its March estimate of $4.7 billion, due to a rapidly deteriorating operating environment.

 

He was clearly worried but while director-general and CEO Giovanni Bisignani might be a "merchant of doom and gloom... he's a good barometer of when recovery comes." 

 

He lead the news agenda in the afternoon with news that Virgin Nigeria will lose the Virgin brand next month.

 

In the story Virgin Atlantic says it "always intended" to pull out from the Nigerian carrier within about five years, and last week brought technical co-operation to a close, essentially ending its day-to-day participation in Virgin Nigeria's operations.

 

Sir Richard said that "Virgin Nigeria had been a breath of fresh air in the Nigerian aviation industry".

  

A final lead for the day showed Sir Richard's deep sadness over the tragedy of the Air France A330 accident last week. Pictures were released showing search team divers retrieving the aircraft's vertical tailfin.

 

Q & A competition  

Sir Richard answered a handful of the best questions you sent in and selected a question by Jean-Baptiste Betrand about the "real heroes of aviaiton" as his favourite out of the hundreds submitted.

Congratulations to Jean-Baptiste who wins a return flight anywhere in the Virgin network.

You saw it here first

As part of Virgin Atlantic's 25 year anniversary, the airline produced a short video featuring some of the highlights and iconic imagery that has marked Virgin Atlantic's colourful history. Sir Richard gave this video to Flightglobal as an exclusive so you saw it here first.

 

Maiden Voyager - maiden commercial flight

He chose an image for the Image of the Day blog of himself with a collection of celebrities on the steps up to the airline's first Boeing 747 named Maiden Voyager before it took off for Newark on 22 June 1984.  

 

See more images of Sir Richard in the Virgin Atlantic gallery and see how Flight reported on Virgin in the archives

 

Sadly, I didn't get a day off, nor was I running Virgin Atlantic (we didn't agree on a jobswap) so I spent most of the day strategising with our troops in preparation for the next week's 100th Paris Air Show.

Probably should've done this a long time ago but, as they say, one thing at a time. Anyway, we've set up a new Flight Tests channel on the site.

And we've retrospectively gone back and tagged previous flight tests so they're all grouped in the one place.

These PIREPS are obviously great stuff - recent test flights include the Phenom 100 and Pilatus PC-21.

You can subscribe to our flight tests on RSS ... .

We've just implemented something called Zibb Infusion on to Flightglobal articles.

Zibb is the RBI-owned B2B search engine that we work closely with, and Infusion is a service that looks for pre-defined keywords within the text of an article and inserts links automatically as and when it finds them.

At this point we've opted to define a bunch of keywords mainly around aircraft types, company names and people. And the links will point to our dynamic landing pages on those subjects.

As it's early days we've only infused a few live articles so we can do some QA testing.

Here's one that is live, and - aside from some teething issues - you can see the links with dotted underlines are the automatically infused ones:

EADS waves off bid for Air Force One replacement

These links also appear at the bottom of the article for reference.

The advantage to the user is that our lovely dynamic landing pages will be much more accessible throughout the site.

Feedback welcome ...

Happy holidays, Merry Christmas etc ... whatever your background or culture I hope you've got today off work and are enjoying yourself.

However if you've found yourself in front of the computer for one reason or another don't despair - we've knocked up a few gems to keep you entertained.

2008 has been a busy year for the aviation industry. Oil prices, safety incidents, biofuels breakthroughs, new aircraft, delayed programmes, company closures and historic restorations - you name it, it seems to have happen this year.

Luckily Flightglobal's been there to document the whole damn lot.

So you'll see that today we have the first in our Year in Review series up on the site. The first story documents the Top Ten Most Read Stories of 2008.

And in the next few days we'll also publish the top videos, images, quirkies, blogs and first flights.

In addition, if you're still hungry for more 2008 retrospective, the majority of our bloggers have written their own reviews concentrating on their own specialisms, so why not check those out as well?

Flight_David_Kaminski3_253.jpgFlight journalist David Kaminski-Morrow recently broke a new record for the site, notching up a million page views so far this year.

Deputy news editor David demolished last year's efforts with a whole bunch of cracking stories, maximising their impact through the use of  videos and images to accompany the textual detail where possible. See below for a list of his top five.

The figures represent a huge increase on last year's best, when Max Kingsley-Jones scored 644,498 page views over the full twelve months. With four months of the year still to go, the annual record looks set to soar.

I think this step up in performance has many contriuting factors - it's not just David but all the Flight journalists that are pulling in more traffic than in 2007. However one key to their success is the use of our web analytics tool, which helps Flight journalists keep track of their performance, make sense of what works online and respond by tuning their output to the needs of the users.


David's top five stories:

A new addition to the link furniture around our articles is the "Discuss this article on AirSpace" option below the main body of the article.

 

discuss this article.jpgThis has been a little while in development and more than a little tricky as it connects two different platforms is several ways.

Its function is to pass through an article headline to our discussion forums for further debate/comment.

If the "Discuss this article on AirSpace" link is followed a new thread is automatically authored in the relevant section of the AirSpace forums with a post featuring a quote from the article and a link back to it.

In addition, it also opens a new blank post below for the user's comment to go in. This functionality obviously requires a user to be registered on AirSpace and will prompt you for login/registration if necessary.

If you're a subsequent user to follow the "Discuss this article on AirSpace" link then the control/widget intelligently knows whether this has already done and so doesn't duplicate the thread. Instead it takes you to the current discussion, which you can reply to having read other users' thoughts.

The control will also display quick links (with time/date stamps) to the latest existing replies to the discussion if present.

One final feature on the control is a "Who is online?" function which shows recent/current visitors and members to the forums.

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