Interesting that this took 3+ weeks to reveal:
http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/mis...-flight-n67871
Quote:
Officials have revised the account of the last words that came from the cockpit of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 — the latest about-face in the ever-shifting investigation into the jet's disappearance.
The Malaysian Department of Civil Aviation said Monday that the last communication with the air traffic controller was "Good night, Malaysian three seven zero."
Weeks earlier, officials reported the last words were: "Alright, good night."
The cause of the discrepancy was unclear.
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Has anyone been following this as closely as I have? I'm now at a point where I don't even really click on stories anymore; I'm just waiting for the huge headline reading "Debris pulled from ocean linked to lost plane" or "Fuselage found". Until then, it seems the stories are just a way to get clicks on a page.
The one thing that I did find curious: Last week, all planes and ships were headed to a point off the coast of Australia where a lot of debris had been spotted. It seems as though nothing was pulled out of the water before more debris was found hundreds of miles north and the theory of the flight's speed changed, and then the entire search moved northward as well. Why not follow the other leads they previously had? Why not try to track down the initial debris that was spotted and try to identify it? Did I miss something?