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The Wagtail missile, also known as "Wag Tail", was a short-range nuclear missile developed in the late 1950s by Minneapolis-Honeywell under a contract awarded by the United States Air Force. Intended for use as an auxiliary weapon by bomber aircraft, the missile was successfully test fired in 1958, but the program was cancelled in the early 1960s.
Honeywell Aerospace Technologies is a manufacturer of aircraft engines and avionics, [1] as well as a producer of auxiliary power units (APUs) and other aviation products. . Headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona, it is a division of the Honeywell International conglo
The case was a combination of two separate lawsuits: one brought by Sperry Rand Corporation and its holding company Illinois Scientific Developments against Honeywell Corporation in Washington, D.C., charging Honeywell with patent infringement and demanding royalties, and a countersuit filed in Minneapolis, Minnesota by Honeywell charging Sperry Rand with monopoly and fraud and seeking the ...
ASROC started development as the Rocket Assisted Torpedo (RAT) program by Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake in the early 1950s to develop a surface warship anti-submarine warfare (ASW) weapon to counter the new post-World War II submarines which ran quieter, at much higher speed and could attack from much longer range with high speed homing torpedoes.
That year, Boeing was co-chair of the Algal Biomass Organization, joined by air carriers and biofuel technology developer UOP LLC (Honeywell). [21] In 2009, the IATA committed to achieving carbon-neutral growth by 2020, and to halve carbon emissions by 2050. [22] In 2010, Boeing announced a target 1% of global aviation fuels by 2015. [23]
UOP is an initialism that may stand for the following: Ukroboronprom, a Ukrainian defence company; University of Ottawa Press, publishing house; University of Patras, in Patras, Greece; University of Peloponnese, recently founded in Tripoli, Greece; University of Pennsylvania, an Ivy League college in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Adamczyk was born in Poland on February 8, 1966, and immigrated to the US at the age of 11, speaking no English. [2] [3] [4] His family settled in Grand Rapids, Michigan.He went to Michigan State University to study electrical and computer engineering, where he received his bachelor's degree. [5]
A Honeywell 316 at the Computer History Museum Honeywell 316 control panel. The Honeywell 316 was a popular 16-bit minicomputer built by Honeywell starting in 1969. It is part of the Series 16, which includes the Models 116 (1965, discrete [1]: 4 ), 316 (1969), [2] 416 (1966), 516 (1966) [3] [4] and DDP-716 (1969). [5]