The Oklahoman

Boeing bets on robot pilots, air taxis

- BY JULIE JOHNSSON

Boeing is buying drone pioneer Aurora Flight Sciences Corp., gaining a portfolio of futuristic technology such as unmanned air taxis that may someday navigate city skies for Uber Technologi­es Inc.

With the acquisitio­n, Boeing is betting that smarter airplanes will dominate flying, with computer algorithms and artificial intelligen­ce playing an increasing­ly important role in the cockpit. Aurora is an early leader in autonomous flying, with products like a robotic co-pilot and software that can sense landing strips.

“We can’t predict what that future looks like. But whatever form that air travel takes, we want to be a leader,” Greg Hyslop, Boeing’s chief technology officer, said on a webcast after the acquisitio­n was announced Thursday.

The deal underscore­s Boeing’s focus on smaller, targeted transactio­ns while competitor­s such as Northrop Grumman and suppliers like United Technologi­es pursue large-scale mergers. Boeing said the purchase of Manassas, Virginia-based Aurora, which has 550 employees, wouldn’t affect its financial guidance.

Terms weren’t disclosed in a statement by the companies. Hyslop didn’t say if he expects the takeover to close this year, noting that the purchase is subject to U.S. Defense Department approval over the transfer of some of Aurora’s leading-edge technologi­es.

Aurora has designed, produced and flown more than 30 unmanned air vehicles since the company was founded in 1989. Its aircraft use autonomous technology including perception, machine learning and advanced flightcont­rol systems. There’s the Centaur, an “optionally piloted aircraft,” and a robotic co-pilot that has flown a Boeing 737 flight simulator.

In April, the company successful­ly flew an air-taxi prototype that takes off and lands vertically, handy for rooftop arrivals and departures. Aurora aims to deliver 50 of the aircraft by 2020 for testing by Uber Elevate, the ride-sharing company’s initiative for flying cars. Uber, which also counts Textron and Embraer as partners, envisions urban customers zipping over traffic snarls with aircraft summoned by computer or mobile phone.

Autonomy will have to play a crucial role if the technology is to be successful, said John Langford, Aurora’s chief executive officer. For the economics to work, fleets of air taxis and drones will need to involve networks of vehicles with a single controller operating “dozens” of airplanes, he said.

‘Powerhouse combinatio­n’

The company hadn’t considered selling itself until Boeing approached it several months ago, Langford told reporters during a conference call.

“We decided it could really be a powerhouse combinatio­n,” he said, “in terms of getting our innovation­s out to a world market.”

The two companies already work closely together on a range of defense and commercial products, Langford said. Aurora, Boeing and aerospace robotics manufactur­er Electroimp­act Inc. teamed up to create developmen­tal test components of the all-composite wing for the 777X, the new jetliner that the Chicago-based plane maker is developing.

Aurora’s expertise in self-flying aircraft will also benefit Boeing, which has stepped up its research in that area as a pilot shortage threatens to crimp airline growth. The plane maker is studying artificial intelligen­ce that would allow a single pilot to be at the controls during long flights, a potential step toward fully autonomous flights.

“We’re looking at the advances in sensing technology, artificial intelligen­ce and other aspects around autonomous flight — what that can do to make a safe airplane even safer,” Hyslop said. “There’s clearly areas on our commercial aircraft that Aurora can play a role in.”

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