I've tried feeding video over wireless. With civilian radio restrictions (low power and open unlicensed frequencies) the range and bandwidth are very limited. Illegally boosting the power would...er... open every garage door, change every TV channel and ring every wireless doorbell in town. Nothing like getting the video from your RC plane with audio from someone's baby monitor mixed in. A buddy tried it with a car once. The range was 350ft, if line of sight.
Real time video is very bandwidth intensive. Securing a wireless link incurs a huge performance penalty. The guys at slashdot.org had a field day during the war in Yugoslavia when someone figured out that anyone with a TV satellite dish and the knowhow to point it and change the channel could watch real-time feeds from various predator drones at home on their TV sets. The guy who discovered this spent two months trying to find someone stateside who would fix it before he went public. (same protocol most geeks follow with new Windows vulnerabilities). An encrypted low bandwidth fault-tolerant control signal that could carry basic data like position, altitude, attitude etc and send basic commands coupled with a decent autopilot -- a radio system entirely separate from sensor feeds -- would be a good start. A lot of progress has been made with vehicles that can navigate themselves, and sending GPS coordinates takes a lot less bandwidth than keeping a realtime link to your remote Logitech joystick. With enough storage space a drone could keep all data and images it collects on its own hard drive. With enough CPU it could cherry pick images based on known signatures -- human, vehicle, etc -- and send those with co-ordinates as fast as possible to the remote controller. I could maybe do this with an Xbox mainboard. Depends on the internal bandwidth and power needed. Sending 800x600 JPEG images uses a lot less bandwidth and requires a less steady radio link, which would increase the range. Sending real-time video through a satellite (as the Predator does) is unbelievably f'n expensive, and I don't like relying on satellites. Not since the Red Army very publicly tested a satellite killer on one of their own last year. Getting position without GPS needs multiple radio signals from the ground to triangulate from, which may not be easy in the field.
On a side note, the F-22 apparently uses its own juiced up version of Firewire (IEE1394) to transmit data to and from its various peripherals. Nice. USB is too slow. Whatever they have running it would look fantastic on my desktop. CS3 and FSX like I've never seen them. Wow. One way to get around the bandwidth limitation is to send vector data instead of the pixel data used in video and still images. Same protocols the computer game industry uses. A highly compressed data stream from a ground mapping system combined with good topographical mapping software on the receiver could allow a UAV to be flown much like a commercial flight sim game, including stuff on the ground with a known signature. Telling the receiving computer to draw a LAVII or prone human at x,y,z co-ordinates takes much less bandwidth than sending a picture of one. Thanks to the game industry there are existing 3D models available for most of the world's current military hardware. It might cause problems with staff though. People would spend too much time ... er... "training". EA Games is based in Vancouver. Hire a couple of those guys and your Toughbook would never be the same.
Different wing shapes are good for different things. It has nothing to do with history or sentimentality. For subsonic flight a bi-plane configuration provides the best lift with the least power but has high drag. The resistance of the air would rip them right off at high speed. An A10 biplane would be slower but have longer loiter time, as it would take less fuel / power to keep it in the air. It's a trade off. Faster planes have swept wings, very fast planes have small delta wings, but these don't have the same lift and aren't as good under 500-600MPH. The elliptical wing shape used on the Spitfire is as good as it gets for subsonic flight. They have the best balance of lift, maneuverability, and control at both low (near stall) speeds and high (mach 0.8) speeds. Those elliptical wings took three times as long to build as the simple square wings of the Me109 but they were worth it. The square wing can stall suddenly in a tight turn. The elliptical stalls partially (no lift at the root near the fuselage) but not at the wingtips, which causes the wings to vibrate but still retain control. They were much safer to fly when pushing them right to the stall point in a tight turn. Put a 1600hp turboprop on those wings and you'd have the best subsonic fighter ever built. The fuselage could be a brick outhouse it wouldn't matter.
You're right about the cost. The airframe and engine seem to be about 1/10 the cost of an airplane. Most of the cost seems to be software, radio / wireless gear and sensors.