Just a private pilot. Also a farmer who has been running GPS, auto steer, swath control, mapping and recording my seed and inputs, using variable rate applications.
This stuff is amazing. It really can do almost anything I do more accurately than I can. It isn't free of problems though. It seems every year they have a software update to install. I dread them. I'm almost positive there will be a glitch. A glitch at 5 MPH on the ground in the middle of a field isn't quite the problem as a glitch at 150 MPH climbing at low elevation just above stall speed. When my auto steer screws up on my tractor I simply grab the steering wheel turn it where I want it to go and auto steer disengages. Granted sometimes it takes me awhile to figure out the auto steer isn't working properly and it's fairly rare that this happens. It's way to early to jump to a cause for this incident. I have little information and none really reliable. I have read that stall prevention system my have gotten incorrect airspeed reading. Thinking speed was to low forcing nose down to gain airspeed. Many things can cause airspeed indicator to be wrong. I believe it's even on these high tech planes just measuring the difference between the static air from static port on side of fuselage to the ram air entering the Pitot tube. We always put a cover over these openings to keep bugs out. I have had airspeed failures in my plane and they are a bit scary. In my Small plane though with manual controls I do have feedback from my controls. I know what they should feel like in normal operations. I also know what they feel like approaching stall speed and entering a stall. I'm conditioned to lower my nose and my plane is even designed to when in a stall fall in a nose low additude. Flying by wire inherently unstable aircraft (not say this plane is) you really have to trust your instruments and so do your systems. It would probably have taken awhile to determine a system failure then try to correct it with most possibly erroneous information from another faulty systems. Usually more than one thing that cause the incident. Usually a chain of events with multiple mistakes and climbing out at low altitude is the most vulnerable time with the least amount of time for corrections. I truly hope they figure it out soon. I'm sure the tin can kickers are working at it as I type this.
Bless all the souls onboard and their survivors.
Bjrogg