
The U.S. Air Force used $7M for commercial satellite weather data as part of an effort to determine whether or not the data would meet military requirements, Space News reported Thursday.
The obligated funds come from the service branch’s congress-approved $20M budget for the Commercial Weather Data Pilot Program. John Dreher, weather systems branch chief at Massachusetts-based Hanscom Air Force Base, said at the American Meteorological Society’s recent conference that $3M in contracts are underway.
The service branch is also working with accelerator organizations to award contracts at a faster rate, the report noted.
Related Articles
A U.S. government slide presentation shows that the Trump administration’s Golden Dome next-generation missile defense shield will include four layers: one satellite-based platform and three land-based missile systems, Reuters reported Tuesday. The missile defense shield is expected to cost $175 billion and be completed by 2028. According to the slides, one of the layers will be a space-based sensing and targeting layer for missile warning and tracking, and missile defense. Meanwhile, the three ground-based layers consist of radar arrays, missile interceptors and lasers. The slides presented to 3,000 defense contractors in Huntsville, Alabama, show 11 short-range missile batteries located across
The Information Technology Industry Council, or ITI, has provided the Trump administration and newly confirmed White House National Cyber Director Sean Cairncross with several policy recommendations to strengthen U.S. cyber defenses. 4 Strategic Priorities to Help ONCD Address Cybersecurity Needs ITI said Tuesday it organized its recommendations in four sections to help the Office of the National Cyber Director, or ONCD, address cybersecurity needs: lead with strength and speak with one voice; cut red tape and secure the nation; leverage public-private collaboration as a strategic asset; and defend against real and emerging threats. “ITI’s new recommendations provide a results-driven action
A new OneGov agreement between the General Services Administration and Anthropic will provide the federal civilian executive, legislative and judiciary government branches with access to Claude for Enterprise and Claude for Government for only a dollar. Under the agreement, all eligible participating branches will gain up to a year of access to the Anthropic offerings for a nominal fee, including the company’s frontier models with continuous updates as new capabilities are released. The company will also provide agencies with technical support to help them implement artificial intelligence into their productivity and mission workflows, GSA said Tuesday. Accelerating Government AI Adoption