INCOSE Seattle Metro: How Much Autonomy is Enough?

Meeting Title: How Much Autonomy is Enough?
Speaker(s)John Hearing
Date: Wednesday,10 January 2024
VenueHybrid; Zoom and in person information below. 
Time
: 6:00 PM Pacific Time

Registration: None required
Virtual: 
https://incose-org.zoom.us/j/89260379649?pwd=XayOFwVp1t67jRcXaMJbqR3ROjYhnB.1
In-Person meeting: Cascadia Pizza Co., 1820 130th Ave NE, Bellevue, WA 98005

Click here to download the flyer: Seattle Metro Chapter January 2024 Meeting Flyer

Agenda

  • 5:45 -- 6:00 In-person meet & greet, order food, etc.
  • 6:00 -- 6:05 Virtual meeting Log-in 
  • 6:05 -- 6:10 Networking-Introductions
  • 6:10 -- 6:20 INCOSE-SMC President's Message
  • 6:20 – 6:30 Installation of New Officers & Directors
  • 6:30 -- 7:30 Guest Speaker Presentation and Q&A

Abstract

Many have labeled the future as “Autonomous”— INCOSE predicts that Systems Engineering will involve autonomy in many forms. Many companies are moving to capture the new autonomy marketspace, but is this all a good thing? The ultimate question: Is every place appropriate for autonomy? John Hearing will discuss the application of systems engineering to determine whether an autonomous solution is necessary, needed, appropriate and worth the risk before being embraced. John is an instructor for the Center for Technology and Management Education at Caltech; an adjunct Professor for the U.S. Naval War College; and a volunteer Wilderness Ranger with the U.S. Forest Service. He is also the holder of 4 patents and author of a wide variety of articles on systems engineering and military topics.

Biography
John Hearing – 
John Hearing has a long history of applying Systems Engineering to a wide variety of problems in a number of different fields, ranging from development of new Commercial Airplanes to creating and fielding of small unmanned vehicles engineering new methods of communication. A native of Washington State and graduate of University of Washington, he was commissioned into the U.S. Navy in 1980 and served on a variety of ships before shifting to the Intelligence field. His experiences with the challenges of providing intelligence support afloat led him to the Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA, where he majored in Space Systems Operations. His thesis outlined creative solutions to solving naval wideband communications challenges and led to his assignment to the staff of the Chief of Naval Operations and his appointment as the project manager to turn his thesis into a real system. The result, known as Project CHALLENGE ATHENA, provided a 20x increase in naval communications capability to major naval ships. Mr. Hearing retired from the Navy in 2000 and joined The Boeing Company, where he was part of the System of Systems Architectures group, Boeing Defense Systems (BDS), and Boeing Commercial Airplanes (BCA). In Phantom Works and BDS, he led a variety of projects ranging from software development for intelligence resource allocation; software to assist with military planning of operations; development of embedded software for controlling UAVs from airborne aircraft; and development of intelligence-collection versions of commercial airplanes. He led efforts at BCA for establishing a Safety Lessons Learned database, creation of a Systems Engineering Playbook, establishment of a Systems Engineering University, and spearheaded a corporate-wide approach to Root Cause Corrective Action (RCCA). He retired from Boeing in 2018

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