Fedex Plane Crash

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  • Shipping Gadgets To Soldiers? Get Ready To Pay Up

    msnbc.com 2 weeks, 1 day ago

    Starting Wednesday, it will cost more to send iPads, Kindles, smartphones and other popular electronic devices to American troops overseas.

  • USPS To Stop Delivering IPads And Kindles To Troops And Overseas Consumers On May 16

    fastcompany.com 2 weeks, 5 days ago

    The United States Postal Service has banned all international shipments of electronics with lithium batteries effective May 16. The cost for families to send gadgets via private parcel service to enlisted loved ones in some countries could almost quadruple. Starting on May 16, new United States Postal Service (USPS) regulations will prohibit iPads, Kindles, smartphones, and other electronics with lithium batteries from being mailed to overseas troops or foreign customers. American firms with customers outsi

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FedEx Express Flight 80 was a scheduled cargo flight from Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport in the People's Republic of China, to Narita International Airport in Narita, Chiba Prefecture, Japan. On March 23, 2009, a McDonnell Douglas MD-11F operating the flight crashed at 6:48 am JST, while attempting a landing on Runway 34L in gusty wind conditions. The aircraft became destabilized at flare and touchdown resulting in an unrecovered "bounced" landing with structural failure of the landing gear and airframe, and came to rest off the runway, inverted, and burning fiercely. The captain and first officer, the jet's only occupants, were both killed.
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