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United Airlines grounds all flights due to computer issue United Airlines resumes flights after technical issues
(about 1 hour later)
US carrier United Airlines has grounded all of its flights due to a computer issue, according to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). US carrier United Airlines grounded all of its flights for about two hours on Wednesday due to a technical issue.
A statement on the FAA website said United flights to all destinations were affected by "automation issues". United said it had suffered a "network connectivity" problem - the same issue that grounded its flights on 2 June.
United customers complained of delays and a lack of information on Twitter. The US aviation authority said the airline resolved the issues at about 10:00 ET (14:00 GMT).
The company has suffered technical issues in the past, including one that meant first-class seats were sold in error for just $100 (£65) in February.The company has suffered technical issues in the past, including one that meant first-class seats were sold in error for just $100 (£65) in February.
"We experienced a network connectivity issue this morning. We are working to resolve this and apologise to our customers for any inconvenience," United said in a statement.
The problem impacted as many as 3,500 flights, the airline told the CNBC TV news network.
United customers complained of delays and a lack of information on Twitter on Wednesday morning.
One passenger, Jeralyn Novak, tweeted: "Never flying @united ever again! The whole computer system is down and stuck in Boise."
Betsy Fischer Martin, a journalist travelling with United, tweeted: "Our @united airlines pilot on their global outage: "It's like someone pulled the plug on our computers - It's embarrassing, I apologise."