DAL Poolie Info
#1811
If I'm not mistaken, the company can leave posted positions unfilled. I think that would be more likely to happen than for them to fill NYC 88A with someone in a first year seat lock.
#1812
Traffic would be a pretty big gotcha. Depending on your sim times, you could be spending a lot of time in the car. Guy in my class was staying with family 45-1hr (no traffic) from the airport. Finally gave up and just got a hotel. I LIVE an hour north and ended up getting a hotel for most days.
#1813
I've been looking all over for this. Are the files up all the time or only when you are due for training? If you could give me a path the 7ER new hire training files I'd be greatful.
#1814
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: May 2010
Posts: 327
Buckhead won't be too bad. Heck you are already inside the perimeter. I live in 400 which is a parking lot during rush hour. I would stay with the fam, but give yourself a good buffer for your B period sims (0920 show).
#1815
As a Jan 2001 hire, I would caution not to get too giddy about upgrading. I was still a long way off from an A seat before the merger and am now still 1000 numbers away from the most junior captain today. FWIW, NYC88A is number 4 or 5 on my bid.
#1816
Traffic would be a pretty big gotcha. Depending on your sim times, you could be spending a lot of time in the car. Guy in my class was staying with family 45-1hr (no traffic) from the airport. Finally gave up and just got a hotel. I LIVE an hour north and ended up getting a hotel for most days.
Anyone coming from up North on 400, forget about it. Worst commute in the City and has to be one of the worst in the nation. I don't know how people do it everyday.
#1817
#1818
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Sep 2007
Position: B737 CA
Posts: 1,518
Yeah I have no doubt that if the upgrade did go surprisingly junior - like say 2007 or 2008 hires this time around - lots of people would adjust their bids on the next AE. I don't know exactly how the crystal ball works and nobody's given me a really good answer, but for my seniority (11600ish) it shows more people with a bid in for MSP 88B than NYC 88A, heh. In both cases, the total number ahead of me is higher than the sum of all those with that position as their 1st, 2nd, and 3rd choice. Does the crystal ball total number only look as far as the 5th choice or something?
As far as the computer question, there are 4 pieces of training you'll have to do in indoc & initial qual, current as of a few weeks ago:
1. Required HR training using LMS. This is online based and worked fine for me using Mac OS and Firefox - but not using Windows and IE9! Go figure.
2. Indoc memory stick. Takes 3-5 hours. Works in Windows ONLY.
3. Aircraft systems training on memory stick. Around 15 hours worth. Works in Windows ONLY.
4. Theater training on CD-ROM. About 1 hour. Works in Windows only.
The company is actually giving newhires with Macs a free copy of Windows 7. You can either buy Parallels / Fusion or similar to run Windows in conjunction with Mac OS, or use the Boot Camp utility (which comes with Mac OS X) to install it on a separate partition. Depending on which version of Mac OS you're running, the Boot Camp route can be a little tricky and a bit of computer/Mac knowledge is helpful. Parallels installation is more intuitive.
As for those that say Windows polluted their Mac, I personally went the Boot Camp route, and all the windows stuff is confined to the Windows partition on your hard drive. It's like having a separate computer; Windows can't even read the portion of your hard drive formatted for Mac OS. That said, the windows partition is going to take 20Gb *minimum,* 30 is better for a smooth-running install. IF that reduces the free space on your Mac partition to less than 20% of the total partition size, Mac OS X will run much more slowly due to the way it handles virtual memory. So let's say you have a 125Gb HDD with 90Gb already used, a 20Gb partition for windows will reduce your Mac partition to 105Gb with only 15Gb free, which will slow down Mac OS X a ton. So if you have a fairly small or relatively full HDD on your Mac, I'd upgrade that before coming to training. If you're running less than 4Gb RAM & especially if looking to run Parallels or Fusion, I'd also consider upgrading memory.
So far as not bringing a computer to training, it's doable, but you'll be spending time in the schoolhouse before/after class getting your training done. The hotel does have a few PCs in a training room they have set up for DL pilots, but the people in my class that tried to use them had trouble getting them to read the memory stick. So I'd personally bring whatever you have and try to make that work, and if it doesn't just plan on spending a few extra hours at the schoolhouse.
As far as the computer question, there are 4 pieces of training you'll have to do in indoc & initial qual, current as of a few weeks ago:
1. Required HR training using LMS. This is online based and worked fine for me using Mac OS and Firefox - but not using Windows and IE9! Go figure.
2. Indoc memory stick. Takes 3-5 hours. Works in Windows ONLY.
3. Aircraft systems training on memory stick. Around 15 hours worth. Works in Windows ONLY.
4. Theater training on CD-ROM. About 1 hour. Works in Windows only.
The company is actually giving newhires with Macs a free copy of Windows 7. You can either buy Parallels / Fusion or similar to run Windows in conjunction with Mac OS, or use the Boot Camp utility (which comes with Mac OS X) to install it on a separate partition. Depending on which version of Mac OS you're running, the Boot Camp route can be a little tricky and a bit of computer/Mac knowledge is helpful. Parallels installation is more intuitive.
As for those that say Windows polluted their Mac, I personally went the Boot Camp route, and all the windows stuff is confined to the Windows partition on your hard drive. It's like having a separate computer; Windows can't even read the portion of your hard drive formatted for Mac OS. That said, the windows partition is going to take 20Gb *minimum,* 30 is better for a smooth-running install. IF that reduces the free space on your Mac partition to less than 20% of the total partition size, Mac OS X will run much more slowly due to the way it handles virtual memory. So let's say you have a 125Gb HDD with 90Gb already used, a 20Gb partition for windows will reduce your Mac partition to 105Gb with only 15Gb free, which will slow down Mac OS X a ton. So if you have a fairly small or relatively full HDD on your Mac, I'd upgrade that before coming to training. If you're running less than 4Gb RAM & especially if looking to run Parallels or Fusion, I'd also consider upgrading memory.
So far as not bringing a computer to training, it's doable, but you'll be spending time in the schoolhouse before/after class getting your training done. The hotel does have a few PCs in a training room they have set up for DL pilots, but the people in my class that tried to use them had trouble getting them to read the memory stick. So I'd personally bring whatever you have and try to make that work, and if it doesn't just plan on spending a few extra hours at the schoolhouse.
#1820
Its certainly possible to go through life with a Mac and do all the work-arounds but if I was a new hire devoted to Apple I would buy a cheap Windows machine for work related stuff. Keep your Apple and enjoy it, but surrender to the Borg as far as Delta is concerned.
Coming to Delta means you have been assimilated.
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