Google Flights Will Now Predict Airline Delays -- Before the Airlines Do (techcrunch.com) 59
Google is rolling out a few new features to its Google Flights search engine to help travelers tackle some of the more frustrating aspects of air travel -- delays and the complexities of the cheaper, Basic Economy fares. From a report: With the regard to delays, Google Flights won't just be pulling in information from the airlines directly, however -- it will take advantage of its understanding of historical data and its machine learning algorithms to predict delays that haven't yet been flagged by airlines themselves. Explains Google, the combination of data and A.I. technologies means it can predict some delays in advance of any sort of official confirmation. Google says that it won't actually flag these in the app until it's at least 80 percent confident in the prediction, though.
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Sell advertising.
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The real power or killer app is Google Luggage Locator, followed closely by D00d where is my car? app.
International downloads cause a meltdown of the hosting servers =]
Seems easy.... (Score:2)
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Re:Seems easy.... (Score:5, Informative)
During certain times of year, winds shift in such a way that they go from using the five parallel north-south runways (four primary, plus one shorter runway for small planes) to using the two 45-degree runways.
When this happens, they have to stop all departures and all arrivals that aren't already lined up, and once the inbound traffic is cleared, then and only then can they resume takeoffs and landings on the new runways. IIRC, the changeover itself creates about a twenty or thirty minute hiccup every time they switch runways.
But to make matters worse, at that point, there are less than half as many active runways, which reduces the maximum traffic volume proportionately. So if it stays in that configuration during high-volume periods, delays can pile up, and in some cases, they may end up diverting some arrivals to Love Field.
Re: Seems easy.... (Score:1)
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You are not too far off there. PIT is starting to allow non-fliers to the airside terminal to access the mall parts. The long term goal is to remove the landside terminal entirely and use the unused half of the airside terminal as more mall space.
http://www.pittsburghmagazine.... [pittsburghmagazine.com]
http://www.flypittsburgh.com/m... [flypittsburgh.com]
I have no clue why someone would want to go through TSA security just to go to... a mall?
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It's like the baby brother of Frankfurt/Main in that regard, yes.
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Getting stuck at DFW isn't a bad thing. It's like a shopping mall with parking for airplanes.
That's exactly why being stuck at DFW is such a bad thing. To most of us, going shopping is a necessary evil and shopping centres are not fun places (bright lights, crappy music, old people arguing over a penny, uncouth breeders with their uncontrolled and screeching crotchspawns). Hell, there's a reason I do my food shopping on a Wednesday... its when the fewest people are in my way.
If I'm stuck in SIN, there's enough there that I wouldn't need to leave the airport without spending a fortune, if I were stu
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I am never going to purchase a flight I don't earn miles on... determining when the cheapest qualifying flights are.
This pretty much explains why modern economy flying is so awful.
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It'd also be nice to add a checked bag when you go into the comparison so you don't have to mentally track that.
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This isn't new (Score:3)
You don't need machine learning for something that simple statistical analysis will do.
Unless Google's adding in a few factors into the model like weather and time of year.
Which leads to an interesting side-business. Gambling on "airline times."
Ahh the airfield is kinda muddy today and Frontier airlines always does better on a muddy track...
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Ah yes... Frontier.. "The proud bird with the muddy feet" was the sarcastic description my Dad used to give for them after they had a runway excursion into the mud at Stapleton Airport in Denver.
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Machine Learning can do a lot better (Score:4, Interesting)
Some of the airline reservation services display an "ontime" percentage next to the flight - EG This flight is ontime 75% of the time. You don't need machine learning for something that simple statistical analysis will do.
You do if you want to provide better information than this. For example, I would be fine taking a flight which is 75% on time and the remaining 25% of the time is only 20 minutes late. I would be less happy if 25% of the time the flight was 2 hours late. Also this statistic ignores patterns in the delays. For example, suppose the flight is on time 90% of the time from Mon-Thu but delayed by 2 hours 85% of the time on Friday? This would be completely consistent with the data provided if you average over the week but clearly, you would never want to take this flight on Friday!
While you might be able to do a simple analysis on a weekly pattern airline schedules are more complex and if the delay is caused by a complex interaction of the crew, plane and airport schedules it will be a lot harder to pick up manually whereas a machine learning algorithm should easily be able to cope with this level of complexity and spot that on the third tuesday and second wednesday of every month your flight is delayed. In fact, if the airlines do not do this already, this might be a useful tool for them to spot and identify problems so they can fix them.
Before the Airlines Do? (Score:1)
Google Flights Will Now Predict Airline Delays -- Before the Airlines Do
Headline is misleading. Google doesn't know 'before the airlines do.'
What Google will be doing is telling you before the airlines do.
The airlines by and large know which flights are going to be delayed, why, and by how much. They don't need Google magic for this. They just don't always choose to tell you (or their frontline staff), because reasons.
Google is going to tell you anyway, even if the airlines haven't.
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Yeah, no shit.
They know the plane you're flying hasn't left yet, and they know they don't have another plane for you.
So when that 4 hour incoming flight hasn't left yet, and yours is supposed to leave in 20 minutes, the airline bloody well knows this. But they will delay and stall admitting th
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Largely true, but let's remember that the people giving you information about your late flight are as in the dark as you are.
I'm sure dispatch knows what's happening airline wide and how it's likely to affect the future schedule, but until it's been fully decided how to deal with the schedule impacts they don't start telling everybody because they are not totally sure.
Reasons not to communicate include the following: 1. Passengers may take other options. 2. They may be wrong about how long the delay wil
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Until a series of other delays has freed up a different plane that is already at the terminal and a simple gate change allows the original flight to leave on time.
Then your idiotic "80% correct" google algorithm has everyone off eating at a restaurant, booking hotel rooms, and/or generally unaware that there is not a 5 hour delay but instead you should be boarding right now.
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...that's what she said...
Probably not that hard to do better (Score:5, Informative)
Planes are pretty full these days and knowing 15 minutes earlier that you are going to miss a connection can easily make the difference as to if you can make other arrangements or not.
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S06E11
"Attention, passengers. Due to our policy of overselling flights, this flight has been oversold. In accordance with FAA rules the first two people to the front will be upgraded to first class."
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Yes. I've had the same experience several times on United. One benefit is that you can get to the desk and change your booking before the crowd knows.
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This information doesn't necessarily help as airlines often swap planes if the inbound is too late.
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United (at least) only establishes a delay reactively, and is hesitant to do so until they have a specific reason to do so. You have to start to learn what those reasons are if you want to anticipate real departure times. Aircraft substitutions not related to an inbound flight delay are the hardest one to see as a passenger... but if you see that the inbound flight is anticipated to land 15 minutes after your scheduled departure, you can be pretty sure your flight will not be leaving before 45 minutes aft
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United (I fly a lot with them) does not share their forecasting with the customer. I can't count how many times I've been on a flight that had slowly creeping delays that, given experience, had an obvious conclusion. We have simply scads of data of airline arrival / departure times, combined with day-of-week, local and regional weather, etc., and it is unimaginable that United's central planning isn't already doing a lot of work with that data. Same goes for the other major players. If they aren't, then
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My understanding, however, is that the delays are often released to the public in incremental fashion JUST IN CASE the delay ends up being shorter than an initial prediction.
You are correct. I've had delays of 2hours go poof. Upline issues, ATC holds, you name it, it's gone poof a couple of times due to reroutes and such.
plus... rampers can move quickly if motivated. We've done 10 minute turns before negating a delay...
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That is because it is a different system (Score:2)
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Just arrive at the airport 28 hours before your flight and you'll make it to the departure gate on time.
"Machine learning" is no match for market learning (Score:2)
What a no-brainer algorithm... (Score:2)
if (strcmp(Carrier, "AA") == 0 || strcmp(Airport, "EWR") == 0) then DisplayDelay();
Taps into ADS-B & open tracking of flight info (Score:2)
I think most aircraft already broadcast their location via ADS-B [wikipedia.org]:
Flight info [youtu.be].
I don't know a lot about it but I believe people track these things for fun (& it sounds like fun too!). I would expect that they pour this info into a global database too. It would make sense for Google to tap this info and use a planes location & expected location as part of its prediction.
Actually, I think there's a scheme (possibly active) out to have LEO satellites tracking this info to mitigate the "lost aircraft" e
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Dang... there was supposed to be a question-mark at the end of my title... as in...
"Taps into ADS-B & open tracking of flight info?"
I don't know if Googles system actually does use ADS-B and was just pondering rather than stating (which it looks like without the "?")
Last minute announcements (Score:1)