The Boeing 737 Max crashes have revived decades-old fears about what happens when airplane computers become more powerful than pilots

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The Boeing 737 Max crashes have revived decades-old fears about what happens when airplane computers become more powerful than pilots
 
 
The Boeing 737 Max crashes have revived decades-old fears about what happens when airplane computers become more powerful than pilots
 
The Max took some control from pilots and gave it to computers. People in the industry say they've warned of dangers with this kind of system for years.
 
 
 
 
 
A former Navy SEAL commander says most meetings should be avoided — but if you need to have one, here's how to structure it for success
 
 
A former Navy SEAL commander says most meetings should be avoided — but if you need to have one, here's how to structure it for success
 
Jocko Willink said his two decades in the SEALs taught him short, efficient meetings are always better than long ones that leave room for quibbling.
 
 
 
 
 
The US was left alone and humiliated on the world stage as European allies collectively dunked on Trump's 'America First' policy at a major security conference
 
 
The US was left alone and humiliated on the world stage as European allies collectively dunked on Trump's 'America First' policy at a major security conference
 
The Munich Security Conference was themed around the idea of the Western alliance fading, and European allies openly criticized the US's approach.
 
 
 
 
 
 
'Felt like I got hit with a truck' — US soldier describes brain injury he suffered in Iranian missile attack
 
 
'Felt like I got hit with a truck' — US soldier describes brain injury he suffered in Iranian missile attack
 
"My head kinda felt like I got hit with a truck," a US soldier battered at Al-Asad Air Base said, describing how he felt after the missile attack.
 
 
 
 
 
The top Marine officer thinks the Corps needs to be more unpredictable and that it needs the 'Lightning carrier' to do it
 
 
The top Marine officer thinks the Corps needs to be more unpredictable and that it needs the 'Lightning carrier' to do it
 
The Marine Corps wants to be more spread out and more unpredictable in the Indo-Pacific, and that means using its flattops differently.
 
 
 
 
 
The senior Pentagon policy official who certified security aid to Ukraine has been asked to resign
 
 
The senior Pentagon policy official who certified security aid to Ukraine has been asked to resign
 
John Rood, who was involved in certifying aid to Ukraine, has reportedly been asked to step down as undersecretary of defense for policy.
 
 
 
 
 
A GOP senator keeps pushing a thoroughly debunked theory that the Wuhan coronavirus is a leaked Chinese biological weapon gone wrong
 
 
A GOP senator keeps pushing a thoroughly debunked theory that the Wuhan coronavirus is a leaked Chinese biological weapon gone wrong
 
The conspiracy theory focuses on the Wuhan National Biosafety Laboratory, a government lab near the meat market at the center of the outbreak.
 
 
 
 
 
A retired Navy SEAL commander explains how the tactics he used to collaborate with the Army and Marines can work just as well in the office conference room
 
 
A retired Navy SEAL commander explains how the tactics he used to collaborate with the Army and Marines can work just as well in the office conference room
 
Jocko Willink said that effective collaboration comes from strong working relationships, and that those are built on humility.
 
 
 
 
 
Chinese police reportedly put a professor under house arrest, cut his internet, and kicked him off social media after he criticized President Xi over the coronavirus
 
 
Chinese police reportedly put a professor under house arrest, cut his internet, and kicked him off social media after he criticized President Xi over the coronavirus
 
Xu Zhangrun, a law professor at the elite Tsinghua University, had published a scathing essay on the Chinese government's handling of the coronavirus.
 
 
 
 
 
Step inside a 30-ton Marine Corps amphibious assault vehicle built to battle onto enemy beaches
 
 
Step inside a 30-ton Marine Corps amphibious assault vehicle built to battle onto enemy beaches
 
The AAV is more than 40 years old, but it remains the "number one vehicle" to storm a beach under fire, a Marine said.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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