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October 20, 2024 | International, Land

HENSOLDT secures contract to deliver radar systems for Space Centre Australia

The total order volume of the initial phase is worth around 20 million euros (around $30 million AUD).

https://www.epicos.com/article/879724/hensoldt-secures-contract-deliver-radar-systems-space-centre-australia

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    July 15, 2021 | International, C4ISR

    Northrop Adopts Lean-Agile for Development of F-16 AESA Radar Software

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  • The Army Wants Autonomous Aviation Tech. But Do Pilots Trust It?

    September 7, 2018 | International, Aerospace

    The Army Wants Autonomous Aviation Tech. But Do Pilots Trust It?

    By Matthew Cox U.S. Army leaders are looking to autonomous technology to be the game-changer on the future battlefield, but experts are wrestling with how the service will convince aviators and leaders to trust machines to help them make life-or-death decisions in a split second. Part of the Army's new modernization effort involves manned-unmanned teaming, a concept that will rely on unmanned, autonomous aircraft and ground vehicles working, in some cases, as forward scouts to identify and select targets much quicker than humans can. Army leaders have stressed that there will always be a "human in the loop" to prevent misjudgements that could result in unintended casualties. But aviators and leaders are still reluctant to trust machines to think for themselves. "Trust in autonomy is going to be a challenge as we move forward; there is a huge psychological component to it," Patrick Mason, deputy for the Army's Program Executive Office Aviation, told an audience Wednesday at the Association of the United States Army's Aviation Hot Topic event. Col. Thomas von Eschenbach, director of the Capability Development and Integration Directorate at the Army's Aviation Center of Excellence, has been running simulations to experiment on how autonomy and artificial intelligence can make aviators more effective. "When you add autonomy and you add AI ... you quicken the pace of decisions," von Eschenbach said. "We don't want to take things away from a human; we want to want to enable humans to be faster [and] more agile, and make the decisions inside somebody else's decision cycle. Full article: https://www.military.com/daily-news/2018/09/06/army-wants-autonomous-aviation-tech-do-pilots-trust-it.html

  • U.S. Army Awards Boeing $160 Million to Continue Chinook Rotor Blade Support

    October 3, 2018 | International, Aerospace

    U.S. Army Awards Boeing $160 Million to Continue Chinook Rotor Blade Support

    Company will support rotor blades on more than 450 U.S. Army Chinooks around the globe Boeing manages rotor blade support work at its Philadelphia site PLANO, Texas, Oct. 1, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- Boeing (NYSE: BA) will continue its support for the U.S. Army's inventory of H-47 Chinook rotor blades with a new $160 million contract award. The five-year performance-based logistics agreement extends work that began in 2012 and calls for the continued management of stock availability and the overhauling of all Chinook blades for the U.S. Army. Boeing is responsible for rotor blade maintenance, repair and overhaul, as well as developing innovative ways to save blades that would typically be removed from service. There are more than 450 U.S. Army Chinooks worldwide. "The Chinook has proved itself to be critical to the U.S. Army's wide range of missions, and supply availability is critical to the Chinook's operational readiness," said Kathleen Jolivette, director of U.S. Army Services for Boeing Global Services. "With our demonstrated performance and expertise, we look forward to partnering with our customers on reducing ownership costs and extending blade life for mission success." Operating as one of Boeing's three business units, Global Services is headquartered in the Dallas area. For more information, visit www.boeing.com/services. Contact Jessica Carlton Communications Office: +1 256-937-5692 Mobile: +1 256-603-7137 jessica.m.carlton@boeing.com SOURCE Boeing http://boeing.mediaroom.com/2018-10-01-U-S-Army-Awards-Boeing-160-Million-to-Continue-Chinook-Rotor-Blade-Support

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