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| On the Record with Growth in commercial airliners and defense will not be enough for Boeing in years to come-so the world's largest aerospace company is carving out new opportunities under the banner "Forever New Frontiers."
Among them: space-based communications and a major entry into aircraft
maintenance, according to chairman and CEO Phil Condit. "We are driving the fundamental core businesses, but how do you take the company from there?" he asked. Condit has a two-pronged answer. Leverage the huge installed base-90% of the airline seats flying today are Boeing-by spinning in new services, and develop futuristic new products. Boeing is used to new frontiers: it once sunk all its net worth into a jet transport prototype (the Boeing 707), and bet the company again on the 747. Condit isn't going that far, but he points to the new space-based "Connexion by Boeing" communications concept as a comparably radical product that could have a similar impact on the company's future. Connexion is a high-speed, broad bandwidth communication system that uses a proprietary antenna and satellite technology to enable a tremendous throughput of data. With it, airline passengers can watch live TV or surf the Internet live from their seats-combined facilities no other company has been able to offer. The technology can also be used for space-based air traffic control systems, and, in the military, massive system-wide sharing of information in real time. This would, for example, allow an AWACS airplane to transmit all its data to the ground in real time instead of carrying teams of on-board analysts. Condit says he flies so much he has been Boeing's guinea pig for Connexion, and he is so enthused by it that he himself-ever a salesman-is demonstrating it here at Farnborough. "Our immediate task is to make this available to the airlines and the three million airline passengers who board some 42,300 flights on Boeing-built planes daily." Condit said. "Then we broaden its applications. There really is a vast potential." Crucial to future product development in this area is Boeing's pending $3.75 billion acquisition from General Motors of the space and communications business of Hughes Electronics Corp. "A lot of the things we see ahead of us involve space-based communication, and the intellectual capital in Hughes around space based communication is substantial-they are really good," said Condit. "It is that capability we want." The acquisition of Hughes "is not a play on the building of satellites," he said. "It is really much more about the intellectual capital in space-based communications."
Yet with all this going on, Condit is adamant that one can't take
his eye off running the healthy core businesses. By John Morris | ||||||
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