There is a consistent suggestion being made in this thread that when "big computer" burps, all hope is lost, the airplane and its contents are doomed.
At least with Boeing (I cannot comment on airbus technology - I never trained on one), little has changed in the fundamentals of the flying of the airplane since the 707 first flew in 1957. In the early days (including mine back to the early '70's) of flying jet transports, pilots had to be able to fly - your career depended upon it - failure to demonstrate satisfactory skills meant a career change. Autopilots existed then but they were sloppy, the could hold a heading and an altitude with some precision and they could fly and instrument approach but the pilots had to control power (autothrottles were in the future). Frankly, it was easier and more fun just to fly the approach manually. Unlike today's jets, the function of the autopilot was not required for dispatch.
Computer operation of commercial jets was a logical extension of the technological age. They allowed with their precision, fuel savings, more exact navigation, landings when visibility is basically nil, etc. Its a personal opinion but I believe these advancements lead to an era where people but most dangerously, airline managements and regulatory authorities chose to forget what pilots are there for. Training and qualification standards eroded to a degree where one fatal accident caused the FAA to make dramatic changes. While North American airlines are finding pilot recruitment to be far more difficult under these new rules, they will hopefully enhance aviation safety.
Similar training and qualification standards are not applied in the same way in the rest of the world; especially in what we like to call the "third world". You may recall the ban applied by the EU to Garuda Indonesian and other airlines beginning in what I recall to be 2010. They earned the ban due to an abhorrent safety record and over the next 7 to 8 years, they committed to internal changes that brought them back to the standards of a world class airline.
Until all airlines and regulatory bodies, commit to safety by putting pilots in control that are more than "meat in the seat", I suggest you review what airline your travel agent booked you on.