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DoD/News
Navy Reports Progress on MQ-25A Unmanned Tanker C2 System
by Ramona Adams
Published on August 15, 2017
Navy Reports Progress on MQ-25A Unmanned Tanker C2 System


Navy Reports Progress on MQ-25A Unmanned Tanker C2 SystemThe U.S. Navy has tested a command-and-control system for the service branch’s future MQ-25A unmanned aerial refueling tanker in an effort to validate the C2 platform’s function to control and relay data, Defense News reported.

Capt. Beau Duarte, Unmanned Carrier Aviation program manager at the Naval Air Systems Command, said integrating the Unmanned Carrier Aviation Mission Control System into the Navy’s communications infrastructure will be a key step for MQ-25A operations.

The Navy aims to deploy MQ-25A drones on the Dwight D. Eisenhower and George H.W. Bush aircraft carriers as soon as 2019, with a goal to eventually operate the unmanned tankers aboard Nimitz– and Ford-class ships.

Boeing, General Atomics, Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman received a draft request for proposals in July as part of the service branch’s plan to award an MQ-25A engineering and manufacturing development contract in 2018.

All four companies secured contracts worth a combined $167 million during 2016 to help reduce risks associated with the MQ-25A program.

The UMCS mission control system is based on current Navy technologies such as the Common Display System, Common Processing System and Common Control System, according to Duarte.

Common UCMS functions are powered by CCS software architecture but program officials look to procure third-party software to support vehicle-specific operations, the report noted.

Government Technology/News
Draft House Bill Seeks to Establish Cyber Standards for Internet-Connected Devices
by Jane Edwards
Published on August 15, 2017
Draft House Bill Seeks to Establish Cyber Standards for Internet-Connected Devices


Draft House Bill Seeks to Establish Cyber Standards for Internet-Connected DevicesRep. Robin Kelly (D-Illinois) has begun to solicit comments from policymakers and industry stakeholders about cyber protections by issuing a discussion draft on a bill that would establish minimal cybersecurity standards for internet-connected devices, Nextgov reported Monday.

Kelly’s measure is a companion bill to Senate legislation – Internet of Things Cybersecurity Improvement Act of 2017 – introduced early this month by Sens. Mark Warner (D-Virginia), Cory Gardner (R-Colorado), Ron Wyden (D-Washington) and Steve Daines (R-Montana).

The House bill would form an advisory board to be led by the director of the Office of Management and Budget.

The board would be responsible for the development of objectives and definitions for IoT standards and would include leaders from federal agencies such as the Department of Homeland Security, Federal Communications Commission and the General Services Administration.

The OMB chief and other agency heads would release guidelines that detail requirements for agencies when it comes to the procurement of IoT devices within six months of the bill’s enactment.

The legislation would also direct contractors to share data with agencies on updates to IoT devices and security support they provide for such devices.

Kelly’s office said the lawmaker may propose the measure in the fall of 2017, the report added.

Government Technology/News
DARPA Seeks to Accelerate Scientific Discovery Process Through ‘Disruptioneering’ Programs
by Scott Nicholas
Published on August 14, 2017
DARPA Seeks to Accelerate Scientific Discovery Process Through ‘Disruptioneering’ Programs


DARPA Seeks to Accelerate Scientific Discovery Process Through 'Disruptioneering' ProgramsThe Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency‘s Defense Sciences Office has unveiled the first two programs under DSO’s “Disruptioneering” initiative that aims to accelerate the process for investigating fundamental and applied science concepts in a push to drive the development of national security technologies.

DARPA said Friday the first phase of Disruptioneering programs will focus on concept assessment and run for three to six months, followed by a 12- to 15-month second phase if results warrant additional exploration activities.

“For this new Disruptioneering effort, the time from program announcement to when research proposals are due has been shortened to as few as 30 days, and the technical section of proposals can’t exceed eight pages,” said Kristen Fuller, DSO’s assistant director for program management.

“To make the process as straightforward as possible, we’ve streamlined contracting and internal processes to meet an aggressive schedule.”

The Fundamental Design program aims to evaluate fundamental computational and mathematical systems that can represent the optimized designs of mechanical systems.

The Imaging Through Almost Anything, Anywhere program seeks to address challenges related to imaging through metal containers, walls, ground, fog and water.

News
CBO: Fiscal 2017 Appropriation Actions Will Not Result in Sequestration
by Jane Edwards
Published on August 14, 2017
CBO: Fiscal 2017 Appropriation Actions Will Not Result in Sequestration


CBO: Fiscal 2017 Appropriation Actions Will Not Result in SequestrationThe Congressional Budget Office has said sequestration is not necessary for fiscal 2017 since appropriations for both defense and nondefense programs do not go beyond the caps on discretionary budget authority.

CBO said in an August report that fiscal 2017 appropriations for defense programs based on the Office of Management and Budget estimates are equivalent to the $634-billion adjusted caps for 2017.

OMB’s estimated nondefense budget of $552 billion for fiscal 2017 is $1.5 billion below the adjusted cap of $553.5 billion, according to the report.

CBO said adjustments to discretionary budget limits for this year reached a total of $118 billion and those adjustments to the cap include overseas contingency operations, emergency requirements, disaster relief and program integrity initiatives such as Medicare and disability insurance programs.

Caps set in the Budget Control Act of 2011 for both defense and nondefense programs will climb from $1.156 trillion in fiscal 2018 to $1.234 trillion in fiscal 2021, the report noted.

CBO also estimates the overall cap on discretionary budget authority will drop by approximately $5 billion to $1.065 trillion in FY 2018, and then grow steadily to approximately $1.145 trillion by FY 2021.

Government Technology/News
DARPA Eyes Radio-Frequency Enabled Machine Learning System Under New Program
by Nichols Martin
Published on August 14, 2017
DARPA Eyes Radio-Frequency Enabled Machine Learning System Under New Program


DARPA Eyes Radio-Frequency Enabled Machine Learning System Under New ProgramThe Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency plans to develop a machine learning system that incorporates abilities to read, discern, automatically adjust and learn through radio frequencies as part of a new program.

DARPA said Friday Paul Tilghman, manager for the Radio Frequency Machine Learning Systems program within the Microsystems Technology Office, believes there is a need to integrate radio-frequency capabilities to machine learning so that artificial intelligence may be used to monitor radio signals that could present a threat.

“We want to be able to understand and trust what is happening in the Internet of Things and to stand up an RF forensics capability to identify unique and peculiar signals among the proverbial cocktail party of signals out there,” he said.

The program consists of four technical components that focus on signal feature learning, detection of the important visual and auditory stimuli, automatic signal reception adjustment and waveform synthesis for any device, DARPA added.

The agency said in a FedBizOpps notice posted Friday it will hold a Proposers Day on Aug. 31 to discuss the RFMLS program, which will have three technical areas covering the development of algorithms for RF forensics and situational awareness as well as an RF system integrator.

DARPA intends to award up to $4 million annually per award for Technical Areas 1 and 2 and up to $1.5 million annually per award for Technical Area 3.

The notice stated that DARPA will accept proposals through Oct. 10 for work that is scheduled to commence April 2018.

News
Report: DIUx Obligates $100M to Fund Pilot Programs
by Scott Nicholas
Published on August 14, 2017
Report: DIUx Obligates $100M to Fund Pilot Programs


Report: DIUx Obligates $100M to Fund Pilot ProgramsThe Defense Department‘s Defense Innovation Unit Experimental organization has so far awarded approximately $100 million to fund 45 pilot programs in multiple technology areas, Defense News reported Friday.

The report said DIUx issued contract awards approximately three months after the agency collected responses to solicitations and collaborated with service branches interested to support various projects.

Chris Kirchhoff, managing partner at DIUx, said the organization was created to validate the Pentagon’s capacity to establish closer ties with members of the technology sector through technological hubs such as Silicon Valley.

Raj Shah, head of DIUx, said that the organization looks to disseminate its capacities and processes to other organizations within the Under Secretary of Defense, Research and Engineering team.

Government Technology/News
Air Force, SOFWERX to Collaborate on UAV Battle Experiment
by Scott Nicholas
Published on August 14, 2017
Air Force, SOFWERX to Collaborate on UAV Battle Experiment


Air Force, SOFWERX to Collaborate on UAV Battle ExperimentThe U.S. Air Force has partnered with SOFWERX to conduct a “rumble-style” battle experiment on unmanned aerial vehicles to collect information for potential drone operations, National Defense reported Thursday.

Heather Wilson, secretary of the Air Force, said the service branch will hold the ThunderDrone rapid prototyping event at a rented warehouse in Tampa, Florida, to evaluate the forms, platforms, effects and data science needed for small UAV operations.

Wilson pointed to the experiment as an example of the branch’s efforts to rapidly innovate and explore acquisition strategies in response to the modernization of adversaries.

Air Force leaders have urged experienced multi-rotor and fixed-wing aircraft pilots to help the ThunderDrone Squadron build, test and fly prototype and proof of concept vehicles.

SOFWERX also plans to conduct ThunderDrone-related events between September and November, including a technology exposition and a prototype rodeo.

Acquisition & Procurement/News
NAVSEA Highlights Defense Contracting Processes at Small Biz Industry Event
by Nichols Martin
Published on August 14, 2017
NAVSEA Highlights Defense Contracting Processes at Small Biz Industry Event


NAVSEA Highlights Defense Contracting Processes at Small Biz Industry EventThe Naval Sea Systems Command drew more than 200 representatives from the small business community to an industry day held Tuesday at the Washington Navy Yard.

The event aimed to increase small businesses’ awareness of the defense contracting processes and featured a discussion among multiple U.S. Navy offices and industry partners, the service branch said Thursday.

Event participants expressed an interest in learning the methods to accelerate the contract funding process as well as to win indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contracts.

“Our mission is to expand the advantage,” said NAVSEA Executive Director Jim Smerchansky.

“We do that by including the views, expertise and talent employed by small business.”

The Navy noted that the command buys goods and services worth more than $2 billion each year from small businesses.

Cindy Shaver, director of NAVSEA contracts, also advised vendors to explore prime or subcontracting opportunities and review the command’s Long Range Acquisition Forecast document.

Government Technology/News
Bill Newhouse: NIST-Led Initiative Unveils Updated Cybersecurity Workforce Framework
by Jane Edwards
Published on August 14, 2017
Bill Newhouse: NIST-Led Initiative Unveils Updated Cybersecurity Workforce Framework


Bill Newhouse: NIST-Led Initiative Unveils Updated Cybersecurity Workforce FrameworkA National Institute of Standards and Technology-led program has issued a special publication on the updated framework to label information technology and cyber positions ahead of a December deadline to comply with the Federal Cybersecurity Workforce Assessment Act of 2015, Federal News Radio reported Friday.

The National Initiative for Cybersecurity Education’s new cyber workforce framework aims to convert work roles into codes in an effort to help the Office of Personnel Management monitor the recruitment and training of cyber professionals.

Bill Newhouse, deputy director of NICE, said the framework seeks to help agencies identify and address gaps in their cyber workforce as well as make staff decisions.

“Up to three work roles can be coded into a position,” Newhouse told the station in an interview.

“The framework has 55 work roles.”

Newhouse noted the framework’s potential advantages to the Department of Homeland Security’s position description tool and NICE’s plan to update its publication on role-based training for IT and cyber personnel through the use of the framework.

NICE will also tackle the new framework at its annual conference to be held in November in Ohio, he added.

DoD/News
Matthew Donovan Starts in Air Force Undersecretary Role
by Scott Nicholas
Published on August 14, 2017
Matthew Donovan Starts in Air Force Undersecretary Role


Matthew Donovan Starts in Air Force Undersecretary Role
Matthew Donovan

Matthew Donovan, a 31-year U.S. Air Force veteran, took the oath of office to become undersecretary of the military branch during a ceremony held Friday at the Pentagon.

The Air Force said Friday he will oversee efforts to organize, train, equip and deliver welfare services to approximately 660,000 active-duty, Guard, Reserve, civilian airmen and their families worldwide.

He will also manage human resource management, risk management, strategy and policy development, technology investments and weapons acquisition functions in his new role.

“I look forward to helping Secretary [Heather] Wilson and [Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David Goldfein] meet their goals, and to ensuring we sustain the world’s greatest air, space and cyberspace force,” Donovan said.

President Donald Trump nominated Donovan to the Air Force’s no. 2 civilian position in June.

The retired colonel was confirmed for post on Aug. 1 and administratively sworn in Aug. 3.

He logged more than 2,900 flight hours aboard F-15 and F-5E as a command pilot and previously served as majority policy director for the Senate Armed Services Committee as well as a senior defense policy analyst at Science Applications International Corp.

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