What is the first thing that strikes you about Aviation? For me, it's the freedom. The freedom to do whatever you would like in the air (with restrictions, of course). With this freedom comes responsibility, whether that is the responsibility to look out for traffic, keep in contact with Boston TRACON (Terminal Radar Approach Control), or adjust your NDB (Non-directional Beacon) for the next heading. These responsibilities ensure that each pilot remains safe, in control, and connected to society.
Although freedom in aviation is leaving the earth for a few hours, it does not encompass becoming disconnected from society. Much like the Internet, pilots require constant connection to the ground with respect to air traffic controllers in control towers and TRACON stations. Often individuals might not think that aviation and the Internet are similar, but surprisingly, they are very much alike.
Now, I must ask, what is the purpose of the internet? Answers will vary from individual to individual, but for me, I believe the internet is a basis of communication from one area of the world to the next whilst allowing for experiences that an individual using the internet might not have had otherwise. Within this boundary is where aviation has played an imperative role for the last one hundred plus years.
Aviation has connected continents together by allowing for the fast travel between places in the world. Indeed 12 hour plane trips seem tedious and lengthy, but back when the pioneers of aviation flew people to the other side of the world, the length of time meant nothing due to the experience that these people would have. Aviation has connected the world long before the Internet was even fathomed, and aviation continues to do so today. Although the Internet allows for connections to other people around the world in a heartbeat, nothing can replace the feeling of actually meeting a person face to face and seeing a whole other world that was only represented through pictures.