Civilian Airports / Dashboards
Dashboards
Customizable dashboards that surface the day's workload at a glance.
The problem
The morning briefing looks different depending on whose desk it is
An Operations Manager opening the app wants open discrepancies and where today's inspections stand, front and center. Someone focused on safety wants the SMS numbers instead. Someone tracking training wants to know what's overdue. A single fixed screen can't serve all three at once, so somebody is always hunting for the one number they actually needed first.
Glidepath takes the opposite approach: every board is built around whoever is using it, showing what that specific job calls for, arranged the way that person finds useful, and nothing beyond it.
How it works
Ready when you open it, shaped the way you use it
- 01
Opens with real widgets already in place
Instead of a blank grid, the first login already has widgets running: today's inspection state, how many discrepancies are open, the most recent completed check, and shift checklist progress, already doing work before you've touched a setting.
- 02
Edit mode is where the layout changes
Turn on edit mode and every widget becomes draggable, resizable, and removable, with a full library to pull from: inspections, discrepancies, runway and NAVAID status, wildlife, and more besides. Turn edit mode back off and the board holds whatever arrangement you left it in.
- 03
One board doesn't have to be the only one
Set up as many boards as there are ways you need to look at the job, choose which one loads by default, and lift a single widget over to a different board instead of rebuilding it there from nothing.
- 04
Publish one board for the whole team to see
Set a board to shared and anyone signed in at the airport can see it, whether or not it's their own. People without edit access to that shared version aren't stuck: they can spin off their own copy and change it however they like.

The benefit
What it automates
Set up for what the job needs, not a generic default
A new account isn't handed an empty board to figure out. It's handed one that already matches the work, ready to use the moment someone logs in.
You see the numbers without asking for them
How many discrepancies are open, where today's inspections stand, and how far the shift checklist has gotten are already tallied and sitting on the board when it loads. Nobody has to run a report to find any of it.
Shared for the group, personal for you
Everyone can be looking at the same shared board for a common view of the operation, while each person's own board stays exactly as they've set it up.
Related
Works alongside
FAQ
Straight answers
Is a brand-new dashboard just a blank grid?
Not the default one. It loads with a working set of widgets already in place: today's inspection state, the open discrepancy count, the most recent completed check, and shift checklist progress. Extra boards you create yourself do start blank, ready to build however you want.
Am I limited to a single dashboard?
No. Set up as many boards as the job takes and pick which one opens first; that default board can even be one a teammate shared with you.
How current is the data on a dashboard?
Every widget reloads current data the moment you open a board or switch to one, so what's on screen always reflects where things actually stand.
Can other people at the airport see a board I've built?
Yes, once you publish it as shared, anyone at the airport can view it. Someone who can't edit that board directly can still spin off a personal copy and adjust that version instead.