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2007-02-04 21:12:04 · 2 answers · asked by vishal 1 in Cars & Transportation Aircraft

2 answers

area 51

2007-02-05 21:57:02 · answer #1 · answered by cherokeeflyer 6 · 1 0

Mostly only in big commercial software companies.

Flight standard software has a huge burden of documentation and regulation, you can't just go out and write some software and try it... unless you work for a research facility.

In the UK Lucas Aerospace and British Aerospace were the two I knew. I did flight standard software, but only for weapons.

In the US I'd be looking at Boeing and their sub contractors, similar standards are used by people like Lockheed Martin and Northrop Gruman.

Another way to do it is to look up the equipment manufacturers, like Rockwell Collins or Garmin and see if they are hiring.

If you want to do your own work to your own standards then maybe you'd like to consider working on x-plane or one of their plug-in suppliers, but there's not much money in that.

2007-02-05 03:30:04 · answer #2 · answered by Chris H 6 · 0 0

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