Given that VATUSA staff is supposed to be representing us and working for us, as members of VATUSA, I am disappointed with that position.
I'm not, I support it actually..
We are just talking about the callsign used log into the network and perhaps standardizing on something more meaningful to the pilots we are supposed to serve. References to the past were merely that they were more descriptive.
I completely disagree with this sort of thinking. This isn't a network for just pilots, it is a network for aviation enthusiasts who enjoy flying and/or controlling. Plenty of people control and do not fly. Why should everything be about the pilots? Why can't a controller have their fun too? Why can't they be immersed in realism too? The thing about this network is it is about balance and making it fun for
everybody, not one group.
A sector ID is a very trivial thing to be upset about, much less start a big debate over. We will be using sector ID's at ZOA for our upcoming Center resectorization. Our current system is OAK_A_CTR, OAK_B_CTR, and OAK_C_CTR, and those have existed since before I was even on the network. Does A, B, C tell you what is what? No, but it has never been an issue.
Changing to numerical ID's isn't my choice, that's what my controllers want, it's part of the fun for them, and my goal as ATM is making it fun for ZOA members as well as the pilots. If sector ID's help them have fun and feel immersed, then fine so be it, so long as they follow my one request (policy, actually) to ensure the controller info is filled out indicating the region and altitudes they control. They get to have their fun, pilots will have an easier time figuring out who is who, everybody wins.
There is nothing hard about right clicking and viewing the controller info to see who you need to contact. It can be done inside all of the pilot clients, it can be done on all of the traffic applications such as Vattastic, Vatspy, etc. That is why that function exists to begin with, to provide information about the controller. I don't see the logic in telling controllers they can't use a number as the sector ID because a pilot is too lazy to do proper, simple, research before a flight. Heck, even if the info isn't available, what's wrong with taking a guess and asking? Any good controller will have no problem directing them to the right frequency. Just to further prove there is nothing wrong with asking,
it is written in the PRC to do so if you are unsure if the controller is working your departure airport.