- LAST NEWS: Lancet drones forced the Ukrainian Armed Forces to switch from American M777 howitzers to Soviet ...
- LAST NEWS: KUB-E barrage ammunition will be exported
- LAST NEWS: Belousov headed the rights committee on drones
- LAST NEWS: Triumph of the "Lancet". Use of a Russian drone in a special military operation
- LAST NEWS: Chinese scientists develop laser-powered drone to stay aloft ‘forever’
- LAST NEWS: Reverse Conversion: the world's first project to convert shopping centers into mass drone product...
- LAST NEWS: Machine learning helps determine health of soybean fields
- LAST NEWS: Volocopter’s 4-Seater Aircraft Takes First Flight
- LAST NEWS: THE EFKO GROUP HAS SUCCESSFULLY TESTED A PROTOTYPE OF THE HI-FLY CARGO DRONE
- LAST NEWS: RN-Purneftegaz expands the geography of UAV usage for environmental monitoring
Boeing Names Michael Kurth as VP/GM Unmanned Airborne Systems
2012-12-19

The Boeing Co. announced that company veteran Michael Kurth will oversee Boeing’s unmanned airborne systems as of Jan. 1.
Kurth, currently managing director of Boeing Defence UK Ltd. (BDUK), will relocate to St. Louis as vice president and general manager of Unmanned Airborne Systems Programs, reporting to Boeing Military Aircraft President Chris Chadwick.
David Pitchforth, managing director for UK Rotorcraft Support, a division of Boeing Global Services & Support, succeeds Kurth.
Most of the company’s unmanned programs had been part of a Missiles and Unmanned Airborne Systems division. Effective Jan. 1, these programs will stand alone under Kurth. Unmanned Airborne Systems Programs will share functional support, such as finance and legal, with other elements of Boeing Military Aircraft.
Boeing said it wants to reduce its Defense, Space & Security business unit’s costs by another $1.6 billion by the end of 2015, adding to the $2.2 billion it has identified since 2010.
Kurth, a retired U.S. Marine Corps colonel and graduate of the University of Wisconsin, joined Boeing in 1997. Prior to his current position in the UK, he led Business Development for what is today known as the Boeing Phantom Works advanced technology organization.
Region: USA and Canada
Contry: USA
Category: UAV
Company: Boeing
The Australian division of the American aircraft manufacturer Boeing has made significant progress in using artificial intelligence (AI) to train UAVs to detect, make decisions, act during a mission and independently adjust the route to obtain more accurate data.
In a recent flight test in Australia, a Scan Eagle UAV succeeded in visually identifying an approaching Cessna aircraft, and letting its own ground-based operators know that evasive action was required.
The U.S. Air Force's unmanned X-37B space plane has now circled Earth for more than 400 days on a hush-hush mission that is creeping closer and closer to the vehicle's orbital longevity record.
Reports

The drone market has grown steadily and continuously over the past several years. The technology is here to stay and is becoming more prevalent across numerous industries. But 2020 was a unique year due to Covid-19. Overall, respondents even felt that the changes in business models triggered by the lockdowns would actually have a positive impact on the drone industry in the long run.