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News
Lt. Gen. Robert Walsh: Marine Corps Wants Wider Robotic Applications
by Jay Clemens
Published on October 27, 2016
Lt. Gen. Robert Walsh: Marine Corps Wants Wider Robotic Applications


robert_walsh
Robert Walsh

Lt. Gen. Robert Walsh, deputy commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps, sees unmanned systems as tools to help the military branch surpass its enemies in terms of force size, Breaking Defense reported Tuesday.

Sydney Freedberg Jr. writes Walsh has solicited industry input for amphibious systems meant for deployment in the front line in an effort to help minimize casualties in future landing operations.

“Instead of Marines being the first wave in, it’s unmanned robotics, whether it’s in the air or the surface or subsurface,” Walsh told the AUVSI Unmanned Systems Defense conference, according to the report.

He also highlighted other robotic applications the Marine Corps seeks to address such as air and ground operations, Freedberg reports.

Walsh said the Marine Corps seeks a manned fighter to launch drones before it retreats to act as a digital quarterback in order to maintain crew safety during aerial missions, the report says.

He added that the Marines’ Light Armored Reconnaissance troops also work to detect threats on the ground, Breaking Defense reports.

“We find more mass, more affordable, because unmanned systems are going to be less expensive,” Walsh told the conference, Freedberg reports.

News
NOAA Issues Funds for Weather, Water Hazard Forecasting Tech Transfer; John Cortinas Comments
by Jay Clemens
Published on October 27, 2016
NOAA Issues Funds for Weather, Water Hazard Forecasting Tech Transfer; John Cortinas Comments


NOAALogoThe National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has invested $6 million in a technology transfer initiative to obtain scientific and technological systems from government and academia.

NOAA said Monday it will apply the new systems across the National Weather Service in an effort to aid in weather and water hazards forecasting functions.

“This funding represents another important step to get new tools and technologies more rapidly into the hands of our weather forecasters who serve communities around the nation,” said John Cortinas, director of the NOAA Research Office of Weather and Air Quality.

Scientists and forecasters will coordinate to adapt the methods and tools to NWS forecast models and computers under the Joint Technology Transfer Initiative.

The 2016 grant competition focused on projects that help to predict severe storm and water through forecast models, new observational technologies and methods to integrate data into weather forecast models.

NOAA awarded funds to projects that aim to enhance the accuracy of rainfall estimates and weather forecasts and to use radar to transmit observations and real-time waterway flow alerts to forecasters.

Government Technology/News
NASA Goddard Flight Center Team Updates Mission Trajectory Software Tool
by Scott Nicholas
Published on October 27, 2016
NASA Goddard Flight Center Team Updates Mission Trajectory Software Tool


softwareA tool developed by researchers from NASA‘s Goddard Space Flight Center is now available as an open-source program to help private industry and other agency centers plot a mission’s path to interplanetary destinations.

NASA said Wednesday the Evolutionary Mission Trajectory Generator software tool was updated to support the space agency’s Asteroid Redirect Mission that will send a robot towards a large near-Earth asteroid to collect samples from the asteroid’s surface.

Jacob Englander, EMTG developer, worked with Matthew Vavrina, an a.i. solutions orbital researcher, to boost the tool’s capacity which can now help simultaneously optimize the trajectory and the spacecraft’s hardware, the space agency noted.

“The design of the spacecraft and its trajectory are intertwined — especially those that are electrically propelled,” said Englander.

NASA added the updated tool can help determine trajectories and design characteristics of electrically propelled or low-thrust spacecraft and planners can utilize EMTG to define aspects of high-thrust missions that use chemical propellants as fuel.

Englander also said EMTG has been downloaded thousands of times by NASA centers and private companies that needed a tool to help run preliminary trajectories.

Government Technology/News
DARPA-Funded Research Team Seeks to Help Amputees Perceive Levels of Touch Pressure Via Electrical Stimulation
by Jane Edwards
Published on October 27, 2016
DARPA-Funded Research Team Seeks to Help Amputees Perceive Levels of Touch Pressure Via Electrical Stimulation


haptixA research team funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has developed a method that uses electrical stimulation to encode intensity levels of touch pressure in the nervous system.

Researchers from the University of Chicago, Case Western Reserve University and Louis R. Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center have implanted nerve interfaces in two amputees’ upper-arm stumps and used pressure sensors on the volunteers’ prosthetic hands to test how the brain interprets the frequency and amplitude of electrical stimulation of peripheral nerves as touch pressure, DARPA said Wednesday.

Study results showed that volunteers could determine various levels of pressure through modulation of nerve fiber stimulation as well as the frequency of electrical stimulation.

DARPA funded the study through the Hand Proprioception and Touch Interfaces program that seeks to develop a prosthetic hand designed to restore natural functionality to wounded veterans.

“Determining how the nervous system encodes the different aspects of touch is an enormous challenge, but with that knowledge we can engineer more capable neural interfaces that could redefine how people interact with tools and machines,” said Doug Weber, HAPTIX program manager.

Government Technology/News
Former Pixar Exec Rob Cook Named GSA Tech Transformation Service Chief
by Scott Nicholas
Published on October 27, 2016
Former Pixar Exec Rob Cook Named GSA Tech Transformation Service Chief


headshot-rob-cookRob Cook, a former Pixar executive, has been appointed commissioner of the General Services Administration‘s Technology Transformation Service that was established in a push to boost federal government technology.

GSA said Thursday Cook will formally begin his service as TTS commissioner on Oct. 31 and lead an organization that will look to assist agencies on the delivery of digital products.

“Rob is someone who has considerable experience both in delivering great technology and in building great organizations,” said Denise Turner Roth, GSA administrator.

“I can’t think of a better or more qualified individual to take our emerging technology efforts at GSA to the next level.”

Rob Cook has four decades worth of experience in the entertainment industry from roles with Pixar, Lucasfilm, Light Source and Numinous.

He was the first to utilize Monte Carlo techniques in computer graphics and was the co-architect and primary author of the RenderMan software used in 19 out of the last 20 films that took home an Academy Award for visual effects.

DoD/News
DoD Integrates Artificial Intell With Autonomous Weapon Systems; Robert Work Comments
by Jane Edwards
Published on October 27, 2016
DoD Integrates Artificial Intell With Autonomous Weapon Systems; Robert Work Comments


Drone (1)The Defense Department has begun to incorporate artificial intelligence software into unmanned aerial systems designed to fly alongside manned aircraft to detect hostile targets, the New York Times reported Tuesday.

Matthew Rosenberg and John Markoff write the drone is part of DoD’s efforts to advance the development of autonomous and semiautonomous weapon systems in order to help the U.S. maintain its military advantage over Russia, China and other potential adversaries.

Robert Work
Robert Work

“China and Russia are developing battle networks that are as good as our own,” said Deputy Defense Secretary Robert Work.

“They can see as far as ours can see; they can throw guided munitions as far as we can,” Work added.

The Pentagon has allocated $18 billion in funds to technology development efforts, including $3 billion in funds to support the creation of “human-machine combat teaming” platforms in the next five years, Rosenberg and Markoff report.

DoD has also introduced the “centaur warfighting” strategy that seeks to advance the use of autonomous weapons and human control to support the problem-solving skills of uniformed personnel, according to the publication.

DoD/News
David Hardy: Resiliency Gaps Prevent DoD Utilization of Small Satellites for Operational Roles
by Scott Nicholas
Published on October 27, 2016
David Hardy: Resiliency Gaps Prevent DoD Utilization of Small Satellites for Operational Roles


satellite airforceDavid Hardy, associate deputy undersecretary for space at the U.S. Air Force, has described why Defense Department is not yet willing to send small satellites into operational roles at the annual Hosted Payload and Smallsat Summit, Space News reported Tuesday.

Phillip Swarts writes Hardy noted factors that affect the DoD decision include the lack of self-defense capacities such as electronic countermeasures and robust propulsion systems as well as demands placed by military operations on space capacities including weather communications, navigation, positioning and surveillance.

“We need to make sure that we’re building an overall DoD and military architecture that is both mission capable and resilient,” said Hardy.

Smallsat advocates said that the deployment of constellations of redundant small satellites, with a capacity to continue operations even with the destruction of one or two units, can help address DoD concerns on resiliency.

Al Tadros, chair of the Air Force’s Hosted Payload Alliance special contracting authority, added the contracting authority has not been fully utilized in terms of access to the commercial space industry.

Military agencies have not yet used the Hosted Payload Alliance established to help agencies pay satellite operators that will host military payloads aboard commercial satellites and only NASA has used that contract authority to design accommodations for an atmospheric sensor.

Acquisition & Procurement/News
Frank Kelley: Navy Eyes Unmanned Systems Integration With Acquisition Plans Through New Roadmap
by Jane Edwards
Published on October 27, 2016
Frank Kelley: Navy Eyes Unmanned Systems Integration With Acquisition Plans Through New Roadmap


naval drone stock photoA Department of the Navy official has said the service branch has started to develop a draft version of a roadmap that seeks to integrate unmanned technology platforms with acquisition, operational and programmatic plans, USNI News reported Tuesday.

Megan Eckstein writes Frank Kelley, a retired Marine Corps brigadier general and first deputy assistant secretary of the Navy for unmanned systems, said Tuesday at the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International’s conference that the roadmap would include resource investment options and time recommendations to facilitate the integration of unmanned platforms with the Navy’s portfolio.

Kelley told AUVSI conference attendees that his office conducted three workshops to raise awareness on the roadmap.

The first workshop hosted in May at the Naval War College in Rhode Island focused on the potential applications of unmanned platforms in the 2030s, while the second workshop held in July in San Diego dealt with technical, policy and legal challenges to unmanned systems’ adoption, Eckstein reports.

The report also noted that the final workshop held in September at Naval War College discussed the development of action plans to address such challenges.

News
CBP Begins Air & Marine Surveillance Center Expansion Project
by Jay Clemens
Published on October 27, 2016
CBP Begins Air & Marine Surveillance Center Expansion Project


constructionThe U.S. Customs and Border Protection has begun work to expand CBP’s Air and Marine Operations Center at March Air Reserve Base in California.

CBP said Wednesday it established AMOC to help law enforcement personnel detect, identify, monitor and direct the interdiction of suspect aviation and maritime targets.

“This 22,000-square-foot expansion will allow us to shift support functions from our current building and thus create more operational space to house our increases in personnel and latest generation technology,” said Tony Crowder, acting deputy executive assistant commissioner of CBP Air and Marine Operations.

Barnhart-Reese Construction will facilitate the project under an $11 million contract from CBP and the Army Corps of Engineers.

The AMOC expansion project is scheduled to complete within one year and the expanded facility will accommodate  information technology staff and equipment as well as feature administrative offices and conference, break-out and storage rooms.

DoD/News
Carla Provost Promoted to Deputy Chief
by Jay Clemens
Published on October 27, 2016
Carla Provost Promoted to Deputy Chief


Carla Provost
Carla Provost

Carla Provost, deputy assistant commissioner of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) since September 2015, has been appointed to the role of deputy chief at the agency.

Provost will serve as the Border Patrol’s deputy chief and have responsibility over the agency’s daily operations, planning and nationwide enforcement initiatives, the Customs and Border Protection agency said Wednesday.

“Carla Provost is a proven leader who has demonstrated the courage to take on tough assignments, find solutions to the greatest challenges and direct federal law enforcement organizations toward mission success,” Border Patrol Chief Mark Morgan said.

Provost joined the Border Patrol in January 1995 and took her first assignment as a Border Patrol agent to the Douglas Station in the Tucson, Ariz. sector.

She was promoted to supervisory Border Patrol agent in 1997 and later to field operations supervisor in 2001 and other higher level roles until January 2013, when she became chief patrol agent of the El Centro Sector.

Provost stood up CBP’s Use of Force Center of Excellence, now known as the Law Enforcement Safety and Compliance Directorate, to develop CBP’s use of force policy and establish operational Use of Force programs.

She was a police officer with the Riley County Police Department in Manhattan, Kansas prior to CBP.

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