
Pilots must don the SkyLens’ head-wearable device to use AerAware.
Credit: AerSale
It was zero-zero ceiling and visibility the night I flew AerSale’s Boeing 737-700—or so it appeared from the left seat on my Runway 34 approach into Arizona’s Laughlin-Bullhead International Airport. My view ahead of the aircraft was totally obscured by a large black sunshade, flattened inside my...
AerAware Brings Aviation-Certified Augmented Reality To Flying is available to both Aviation Week & Space Technology and AWIN subscribers.
Subscribe now to read this content, plus receive critical analysis into emerging trends, technological advancements, operational best practices and continuous updates to policy, requirements and budgets.
Already a subscriber to AW&ST or AWIN? Log in with your existing email and password.