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News/Press Releases
Viasat Grows Business Aviation Market by Removing Tech Speed Caps; Craig Foster, Claudio D’Amico Quoted
by Sarah Sybert
Published on July 10, 2020
Viasat Grows Business Aviation Market by Removing Tech Speed Caps; Craig Foster, Claudio D’Amico Quoted

Viasat has removed internet speed limits delivered to aircrafts across its business aviation Ka-band service plans as well as doubled its minimum committed internet speed to its service plans to grow Viasat’s business aviation market, the company reported on Wednesday.

“Over the last few years, business aviation service plans have evolved to include bigger data allowances and higher Maximum Information Rates (MIR) and Committed Information Rates (CIR) as service providers react to ever increasing data requirements,” said Craig Foster of Valour Consultancy. “Viasat’s decision to remove speed caps entirely means that it will be poised to support the increase in demand and an overall improved passenger experience.”

To meet the growing demand for applications during flights, Viasat has eliminated Ka-band speed maximums to enhance passenger experience by improving business-critical productivity and entertainment apps, including video-conferencing, accessing VPN/cloud content, email, high-definition streaming services and live TV.

Ka-band customers will also be able to subscribe to Viasat Unlimited Streaming to access online media services. Viasat’s service plan will offer uncapped speeds, using a high-capacity satellite network combined with Viasat’s compact and lightweight hardware.

The Viasat Ka-band business aviation IFC solution uses Viasat’s Global Aero Terminal 5510, which has utilized the ViaSat-1, ViaSat-2 and European Ka-band satellite platform. It is expected to be forward-compatible with Viasat’s next-generation satellite systems.

Forward-compatibility will enable customers to install the Viasat shipset and subscribe to a Viasat service package today, with assurances that they can access additional satellite capacity, including larger data volumes and expanded coverage once Viasat launches its ViaSat-3 satellite constellation.

“We believe this key differentiator is expected to dramatically change the onboard connectivity experience for Viasat’s business aviation Ka-band customers. By removing speed limits, we are creating a home-like connectivity experience for mid-cabin to large- and long-range business jets,” said Claudio D’Amico, business area director, Business Aviation, Viasat.

About Viasat

Viasat is a global communications company that believes everyone and everything in the world can be connected. For more than 30 years, Viasat has helped shape how consumers, businesses, governments and militaries around the world communicate.

Today, the Company is developing the ultimate global communications network to power high-quality, secure, affordable, fast connections to impact people’s lives anywhere they are—on the ground, in the air or at sea.

Executive Moves/News
Report: Lt. Gen. Scott Berrier Nominated for DIA Director Post
by Nichols Martin
Published on July 10, 2020
Report: Lt. Gen. Scott Berrier Nominated for DIA Director Post

Lt. Gen. Scott Berrier, deputy chief of staff for the U.S. Army G2, has been nominated to serve as the Defense Intelligence Agency’s next director, Politico reported Thursday.

Berrier would succeed Lt. Gen. Robert Ashley, who has led the DIA since October 2017 and is a two-time Wash100 Award recipient, if the Senate approves the nomination.

In his current capacity, Berrier leads an organization that provides intelligence to the Department of the Army headquarters, supports the branch’s Foreign Materiel Program and assesses foreign technical threat data in support of the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army for Acquisition, Logistics and Technology.

He was among the four candidates that military services recommended to the Department of Defense for the DIA leadership role as the Pentagon expects Ashley to retire upon completion of his three-year term this fall.

Air Force Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Kruse, Navy Rear Adm. Trey Whitworth and Marine Corps Maj. Gen. Michael Groen also vied to be the next military intelligence chief, according to Politico.

Government Technology/News
Export-Import Bank to Help Space Companies Take On Chinese Competitors
by Jane Edwards
Published on July 10, 2020
Export-Import Bank to Help Space Companies Take On Chinese Competitors

Officials of the Export-Import Bank of the United States said they are extending help to U.S. space companies facing competition from firms backed by the Chinese government, SpaceNews reported Thursday.

David Trulio, a senior vice president at Ex-Im, said the bank has received a congressional mandate to offer help to the space industry and exporters through the Program on China and Transformational Exports.

‘It’s a crucial mandate that we’re working to operationalize,” Trulio said Thursday at a virtual forum.

The Ex-Im program offers loans to foreign entities buying U.S. goods and services and Congress directed the bank to earmark at least 20 percent, or approximately $27 billion, of its financing authority for the program.

Judith Pryor, board member of Ex-Im, said the bank, which had offered $5 billion worth of loans to U.S. satellite and launch services buyers 10 years before it lost its congressional authorization, has “seen an uptick in non-geostationary satellite requests.”

Those include the rising demand for funding for low-Earth orbit satellites used for remote sensing and Earth observation missions and for in-orbit servicing.

News/Press Releases
Lisa Hershman: Pentagon CMO’s ‘Fourth Estate’ Review Finds $11B in Savings
by Jane Edwards
Published on July 10, 2020
Lisa Hershman: Pentagon CMO’s ‘Fourth Estate’ Review Finds $11B in Savings

Lisa Hershman, chief management officer at the Department of Defense (DoD), said the CMO office’s new review of operations and spending within DoD’s “fourth estate” agencies has resulted in $11 billion in cost reductions, Federal News Network reported Thursday.

Hershman associated majority of the savings with the implementation of long-term, sustainable reform initiatives, including improvements to contract management and adoption of category management practices.

“We have about 45,000 contracting officers, and they’re all looking at contracts for commodities like a battery. We had multiple contracts for the same battery, and the price points ranged from 13 cents to $25 per unit,” she told the network in an interview.

“This gives us an enormous opportunity to look at how we’re managing contracts, and whether we can do a better job and save money. The answer is yes. In one of the agencies that [was considering] an across-the-board cut, we looked at six of their largest contracts, and if we just renegotiate those and leverage our buying power, we actually are able to realize more savings than we would with the across-the-board cut.”

Mark Esper, DoD secretary and 2020 Wash100 Award winner, issued a memo in January tasking the CMO office to oversee budget request development efforts for fourth estate agencies.

Government Technology/News
Lt. Gen. Warren Berry: Air Force Eyes Army’s Future Vertical Lift Program
by Jane Edwards
Published on July 10, 2020
Lt. Gen. Warren Berry: Air Force Eyes Army’s Future Vertical Lift Program

Lt. Gen. Warren Berry, deputy chief of staff for logistics, engineering and force protection at the U.S. Air Force, said the service is looking at the U.S. Army’s Future Vertical Lift program as an option to meet the need for carrying out agile airlift operations in a time of war, Defense News reported Thursday.

“That’s something that we’ll certainly look at, but we know that we need to do lift in a different way,” Berry said of the FVL program at a Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies-hosted event Thursday.

Another option Berry mentioned is Agility Prime, an initiative that seeks to explore the capability of “flying cars” that could be used to transport troops and perform logistics and search-and-rescue missions. He said the Air Force is working with the joint counter-small unmanned aircraft systems office led by the Army to protect U.S. military bases from small drones.

“That’s going to be a demand signal on this force moving forward that we’re going to have to really think through and make sure that we have them [airmen] resourced appropriately to execute that part of the air base air defense mission as well,” Berry added.

Executive Moves/News
Bob De Luca Appointed FDIC Deputy CIO
by Matthew Nelson
Published on July 9, 2020
Bob De Luca Appointed FDIC Deputy CIO

Bob De Luca, formerly executive director of General Services Administration's (GSA) Information Technology Centers of Excellence, has joined the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as deputy chief information officer.

De Luca will supervise the Chief Information Officer Organization's administrative duties and support FDIC's application and infrastructure security initiatives under his new capacity, the agency said Tuesday.

Before his previous role, the U.S. Army veteran served as chief information officer at the U.S. Development Finance Corporation and led strategic design company Cachendo as president.

To date, De Luca serves as a member of the U.S. Air Force's 175th Cyberspace Operations Squadron.

Government Technology/News
FEMA Deploys Mobile Emergency Response Units to Support Continuous Disaster Comms
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on July 9, 2020
FEMA Deploys Mobile Emergency Response Units to Support Continuous Disaster Comms

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has established mobile emergency response support units to ensure the availability of multiple communications systems for disaster response, Federal News Network reported Thursday.

The units operate under FEMA’s Disaster Emergency Communications segment and deploy vehicles that house various radio equipment, microwave systems for data transmission and satellite systems for video, data and voice communications.

“We are constantly monitoring chat software and collaboration software to ensure that we are producing consistent messaging. And the information flows both ways,” said Steve Goldstein, liaison of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to FEMA, in an interview with the publication.

Goldstein’s comments come after FEMA released its 2018-2022 strategic plan which details the agency's need for “redundant communication systems” to ensure uninterrupted transmission in disaster scenarios.

“There are inherent risks to relying heavily on these communications systems. We must understand their interdependencies and the potential cascading impacts that a failure could cause,” the plan states. “FEMA must work with our partners to assess the mission impacts of losing the ability to reliably communicate and prioritize meeting all-hazards communications needs.”

News/Press Releases
NIST Earmarks $50M for COVID-19 Manufacturing Efforts
by Matthew Nelson
Published on July 9, 2020
NIST Earmarks $50M for COVID-19 Manufacturing Efforts

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has provided $50 million in funds via the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act to back U.S. manufacturing companies in their COVID-19 response efforts. 

NIST said Wednesday that it seeks to help Manufacturing Extension Partnership centers market services meant to augment the production of various items such as personal protective equipment. The funding effort also aims to assist manufacturers in contacting new suppliers and recovering from potential supply chain disruptions.

The institute awarded funds from $91,000 to $6.1 million to 51 MEP centers within 50 U.S. states and Puerto Rico. The MEP program is established in an effort to reinforce the competitiveness of small and medium-sized manufacturers in the U.S.

Government Technology/News
Space Force, Northrop to Begin Test, Integration of Polar Satcom System’s Control Segment
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on July 9, 2020
Space Force, Northrop to Begin Test, Integration of Polar Satcom System’s Control Segment

The U.S. Space Force’s Space and Missile Systems Center (SMC) has completed critical design review activities for the control and planning segment (CAPS) of a Northrop Grumman-developed satellite communications system over the North Pole.

SMC said Wednesday the review, which took place on June 24 and 25, follows more than three months of critical baseline assessments for the Enhanced Polar System Recapitalization (EPS-R) CAPS concept.

Northrop secured an $87 million contract to develop EPS-R CAPS in 2019 and will now help SMC test and integrate CAPS before working on command and control capabilities for other EPS/EPS-R payloads.

EPS-R serves as a follow-on effort to EPS and includes two eXtended Data Rate payloads intended for encrypted coverage ahead of the delivery of protected tactical and strategic satcom polar variants.

EPS is designed to handle satcom operations over the polar region to support various applications including homeland defense, wartime, humanitarian assistance and contingency support.

The system includes two Extremely High Frequency (EHF) communications payloads, CAPS, a Global Information Grid, a gateway and modified Advanced EHF terminals.

Government Technology/News
Nand Mulchandani: JAIC Working to Integrate AI, Joint C2 Operations
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on July 9, 2020
Nand Mulchandani: JAIC Working to Integrate AI, Joint C2 Operations

The Department of Defense’s (DoD) Joint Artificial Intelligence Center (JAIC) is looking to incorporate AI capabilities into the Pentagon’s proposed enterprise multidomain platform, C4ISRnet reported Wednesday.

Nand Mulchandani, acting director of JAIC, recently told reporters that the center is “spending a lot of time and resources” on the Joint All-Domain Command and Control platform’s AI components ahead of testing various tactical-edge AI capabilities.

“The AI capabilities JAIC is developing as part of the joint warfighting operations mission initiative will use mature AI technology to create a decisive advantage for the American warfighter,” he said.

“As we have matured, we are now devoting special focus on our joint warfighting operation and its mission initiative, which is focused on the priorities of the National Defense Strategy and its goal of preserving America’s military and technological advantages over our strategic competitors."

Mulchandani’s comments come after JAIC awarded an $800 million task order to Booz Allen Hamilton to provide system support for joint warfighting operations.

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