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DoD/Government Technology/News
U.S. Army Unveils Interim Systems for DoD’s Counter-Drone Capability
by Jane Edwards
Published on June 26, 2020
U.S. Army Unveils Interim Systems for DoD’s Counter-Drone Capability

The U.S. Army announced the selection of interim platforms for the Department of Defense’s counter-small unmanned aircraft system (C-sUAS) capability following the completion of assessment and approval of the results by DoD, the service reported Thursday.

The interim C-sUAS platforms were categorized into four systems: fixed/semi-fixed systems, mounted/mobile system, dismounted/handheld systems and command and control.

Fixed/semi-fixed platforms include the Fixed Site-Low, Slow, Small Unmanned Aircraft System Integrated Defeat System (FS-LIDS); Negation of Improvised Non-State Joint Aerial-Threats (NINJA); and Counter-Remote Control Model Aircraft Integrated Air Defense Network (CORIAN).

DoD selected the Light-Mobile Air Defense Integrated System (L-MADIS) as an interim C-sUAS capability for mounted/mobile platform.

Bal Chatri, Drone Buster and Smart Shooter were selected for handheld systems while Forward Area Air Defense Command and Control system (FAAD-C2) and Air Defense System Integrator (ADSI) were chosen for the C2 category.

The platforms for DoD’s interim C-sUAS capability were selected based on integration, sustainment, effectiveness and usability. Army Maj. Gen. Sean Gainey serves as director of the joint C-sUAS office, which is responsible for overseeing the development of counter-drone technologies for the Pentagon.

Government Technology/News
Gen. Mike Holmes: U.S. Air Force Eyes Trainer Jet Competition for ‘Reforge’ Concept
by Jane Edwards
Published on June 26, 2020
Gen. Mike Holmes: U.S. Air Force Eyes Trainer Jet Competition for ‘Reforge’ Concept

Gen. Mike Holmes, head of Air Combat Command, said the U.S. Air Force plans to hold a competition for trainer jets for use in testing the “Rebuilding the Forge” training concept, Defense News reported Thursday. The Reforge training concept seeks to expedite the process of developing experienced fighter pilots. Holmes said the service intends to allow other companies to offer alternative options.

“In our initial market research, there was some thought that there might be only one airplane there was going to be bid against it. But as we did more market research, we found out that there were multiple people that wanted to bid, and they were going to bid with a couple of different airplanes at least,” Holmes told reporters at a Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies event.

The service initially planned to lease from Hillwood Aviation up to eight T-50A trainers, which was built by Korea Aerospace Industries and offered by Lockheed Martin for the T-X competition. Boeing won the T-X contract with its T-7 Red Hawk offering.

“We proposed to lease some airplanes while we’re waiting on the T-7 to arrive and do some experiments along with AETC [Air Education and Training Command] to try to figure out what’s the best use of this new T-7 that we’re going to buy,” Holmes said.

He noted that the service plans to start leasing up to 11 training jets by the summer of 2021 through the RFX program.

DoD/Government Technology/News
DoD’s Platform One Announces Official Adoption of Work-From-Home Model
by Jane Edwards
Published on June 26, 2020
DoD’s Platform One Announces Official Adoption of Work-From-Home Model

The Department of Defense’s (DoD) Platform One, a team of software developers advancing the use of DevSecOps practices, will continue to work remotely to protect its workforce during the COVID-19 pandemic. Rob Slaughter, director of Platform One, announced the move to the team’s more than 180 employees during a recent video conference, according to a blog post published Wednesday on Platform One’s Medium site.

“Platform One is now the first federal office to go to a formal work-from-home model in the face of changing times,” Slaughter said during the call. “We’ve proven that our productivity has not been negatively impacted. In fact, we’re better than before.”

Nicolas Chaillan, chief software officer at the Air Force and co-lead for the DoD's enterprise DevSecOps initiative, expressed in his memo his support to telework arrangement to protect employees and improve productivity.

The Platform One team said office facilities will now operate under a 50 percent capacity rule and that it will provide updates in the next several months as it pilots the work-from-home model.

Government Technology/News
inContext.ai Secures NSF Funds for AI-Based Healthcare Tech Dev’t
by Matthew Nelson
Published on June 25, 2020
inContext.ai Secures NSF Funds for AI-Based Healthcare Tech Dev’t

Texas-based healthcare information technology company inContext.ai has received $225,000 in funds from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to build artificial intelligence-based healthcare tools.

Robert Grzeszczuk, CEO of inContext.ai, said in a statement published Wednesday the funds will potentially allow the company to update the efficiency of its offerings through collaborative efforts.

"Our goal is to make ‘dark clinical data’ which is buried in diagnostic reports, accessible and actionable anytime, anywhere," said Grzeszczuk.

Grzeszczuk added inContext.ai plans to compete for NSF's $1 million Phase II funding. The company has developed a platform that works to optimize and support physicians' workflow by augmenting their interaction with counter-intuitive software tools.

Government Technology/News
Joint INDOPACOM Exercise Last Year Used New Simulation Tech
by Nichols Martin
Published on June 25, 2020
Joint INDOPACOM Exercise Last Year Used New Simulation Tech

U.S. Indo-Pacific Command (INDOPACOM) used a modern simulation tool to administer a wargame exercise that took place in August 2019. USINDOPACOM leveraged the Standard Wargame Integration Facilitation Toolkit to conduct the Joint Forces Energy Wargame (JFEW) and perform associated analyses, the U.S. Air Force said Wednesday.

Participants also used SWIFT to quickly address fuel logistics issues at the four-day event in Camp Smith, Honolulu. The Office of the Secretary of Defense's Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation group developed SWIFT in a matter of 12 weeks.

“The tool helped us identify a few critical energy challenges for the Air Force and joint operations, and provided decision-makers with data-driven insight on how we can improve operational plans for increased readiness," said Dominick Wright, team lead for JFEW.

CAPE engineers plan to use SWIFT with continuous updates for more joint exercises in the future.

Contract Awards/News
MIT Haystack Observatory to Support NASA Very-Long-Baseline Interferometry Systems
by Matthew Nelson
Published on June 25, 2020
MIT Haystack Observatory to Support NASA Very-Long-Baseline Interferometry Systems

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Haystack Observatory has received a potential five-year, $14.8 million follow-on contract to help NASA update and maintain very-long-baseline interferometry systems. The MIT Haystack Observatory team will field personnel, equipment, materials and facilities to support NASA's VLBI stations and data processing activities, the agency said Wednesday.

The research center will also support the International VLBI Service for Geodesy and Astrometry as well as associated services for the Space Geodesy Project. The cost-no-fee contract has a base value of one year and could extend to four more years if all options are exercised.

The Space Geodesy Project is a collaborative effort between NASA, MIT Haystack Observatory and other partners that seeks to build and deploy geodetic stations.

Government Technology/News
OMB Seeks ‘Detailees’ to Support Federal Data Strategy Implementation
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on June 25, 2020
OMB Seeks ‘Detailees’ to Support Federal Data Strategy Implementation

The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is looking to appoint government personnel to help their own agencies achieve goals under the Federal Data Strategy (FDS), FedScoop reported Wednesday.

The “detailees” will complete 20 objectives meant to support FDS action plans, solicit agency input, coordinate with chief data officers, evaluate agency performance, share case studies and establish resources through interagency groups.

Detailees will also develop the 2021 Action Plan and conduct outreach programs with agencies as well as working groups to drive FDS implementation.

In December, OMB released the final draft version of the 2020 FDS which details goals that agencies must achieve by the year's end. Objectives include establishing data standards, developing quality metrics and updating data repositories.

OMB will accept applications through July 17 ahead of expected onboarding on Sept. 1.

Government Technology/News
NAVWAR Demos Alternative Connectivity for USS Gabrielle Giffords
by Nichols Martin
Published on June 25, 2020
NAVWAR Demos Alternative Connectivity for USS Gabrielle Giffords

Naval Information Warfare (NAVWAR) Systems Command has tested a technology made to equip the USS Gabrielle Giffords littoral combat ship with bolstered cybersecurity and backup connectivity. The Commercial Cellular as a Transport (CCaaT) test aims to demonstrate the ship's cyber readiness outside the continental U.S., the U.S. Navy said Wednesday.

CCaaT provides the Independence-variant ship connectivity via 4G LTE technology to establish an alternative connection in the event of satellite communications failure. The technology also allows technical personnel to remotely address issues amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The initial results from OCONUS testing are positive in showing how we can leverage commercial technology to get the fleet important cyber software updates quicker and more reliably,” said Nick Freije, technical director of NAVWAR's Fleet Readiness Directorate (FRD). 

NAVWAR FRD is working with Naval Information Warfare Center (NIWC) Pacific to further implement CCaaT technology across piers where a higher bandwidth still isn't available.

Government Technology/News
Jose Arrieta: Commercial Tech Helped Secure ‘HHS Protect’ COVID-19 Analysis Tool
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on June 25, 2020
Jose Arrieta: Commercial Tech Helped Secure ‘HHS Protect’ COVID-19 Analysis Tool

Jose Arrieta, chief information officer of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), said the use of commercial-off-the-shelf technologies resulted in a more flexible approach to gathering data on the COVID-19 pandemic, FedScoop reported Wednesday.

Arrieta told attendees during a recent webinar that the department’s HHS Protect data analytics tool was able to establish fortified identity, credential and access management (ICAM) defenses while securing the transmission of data.

He noted that foreign adversaries can easily exploit ICAM layers and render existing government security protocols obsolete. The ICAM capability can help agencies other than HHS fortify their network defenses amid the ongoing health crisis, according to Arrieta.

“The way that you actually deliver and the way that you actually contract for a business outcome related to digitizing a process is totally different than it was a few years ago, maybe even a few months ago,” he said. “I think the pandemic has changed that.”

HHS Protect was launched in April 2020 and has collected over 200 health data sets across 6,146 hospitals and 80 percent of private labs to date, the report states.

Government Technology/News/Wash100
CISA’s Christopher Krebs on Cloud Security, Workforce Diversity Issues Amid COVID-19
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on June 25, 2020
CISA’s Christopher Krebs on Cloud Security, Workforce Diversity Issues Amid COVID-19

Christopher Krebs, director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and 2020 Wash100 Award recipient, said the agency is addressing operational challenges as the pandemic continues to require telework settings, Nextgov reported Wednesday.

Krebs told attendees during a recent virtual event that CISA seeks to ensure visibility in server management as agencies utilize cloud migration to handle remote work operations. CISA also seeks to apply Continuous Diagnostics and Mitigation (CDM) approaches and utilize tools to temporarily fill gaps resulting from disrupted timelines, he noted.

“I think of the visibility we have through CDM,” said Krebs. “How can we take and extract value and insights from a single agency, and deploy that insight across a broader set of agencies, and then how do I repackage that and make it publicly available to anyone out there to show these are the sorts of trends we’re seeing? These are the best practices and successful implementations.”

He added that despite unanticipated issues, implementing remote work setups has helped CISA diversify its cybersecurity workforce beyond the D.C. area. The federal information technology will continue to benefit as hiring practices renew focus on ensuring a "more inclusive, diverse community," according to Krebs.

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