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Civilian/News
GSA OIG Seeks IT Specialist to Serve as Lead Programmer
by Ramona Adams
Published on August 26, 2016
GSA OIG Seeks IT Specialist to Serve as Lead Programmer


JobAdThe General Services Administration is looking for an information technology specialist to serve as lead programmer at the GSA’s Office of Inspector General.

A notice posted Thursday on USAJobs stated the chosen candidate will perform programming, establish project requirements, designate work to members, monitor work progress and review deliverables.

The lead programmer will also oversee daily IT development tasks, create reports, promote program goals and provide advice on technology applications for OIG’s business processes.

The incumbent will design, code, test, document, deploy and maintain web-based software applications through methodologies and technologies that the OIG uses.

The position’s responsibilities also include engineering and troubleshooting major IT systems within OIG’s General Support System such as project management methodologies as well as systems development life cycle.

According to the notice, the lead programmer will also provide training and technical advice to unit members.

The application period will run through Sept. 8.

DoD/News
Eric Fanning Talks Plans for ‘Rapid Capability Office’
by Jane Edwards
Published on August 25, 2016
Eric Fanning Talks Plans for ‘Rapid Capability Office’


Eric Fanning
Eric Fanning

U.S. Army Secretary Eric Fanning has discussed his priorities for the service branch with soldiers, staff members and civilian employees at his inaugural town hall meeting, the Army reported Thursday.

Fanning told event attendees on Tuesday at the Pentagon that he expects the newly established “rapid capability office” to help advance Army readiness in the areas of electronic and cyber warfare, survivability and position navigation timing as well as give the service branch a technological edge over potential adversaries.

“We’re not going to use this office to build a new helicopter,” Fanning said.

“We’re going to use this office because some technology on the helicopter isn’t giving us the edge over the adversary we thought it was going to be.”

He said he also aims for the military branch to address behavioral health and sexual assault issues among uniformed personnel.

Fanning also mentioned the Keris Strike joint exercise in Malaysia and his plans to work with Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. Mark Milley to streamline communications in order to facilitate the decision-making process within the Army headquarters.

Fanning was inducted into office in May six months after he was nominated by President Barack Obama for the post.

DoD/News
Army Cyber Center Hosts Experiments for Cyber Electromagnetic Activities Strategy
by Scott Nicholas
Published on August 25, 2016
Army Cyber Center Hosts Experiments for Cyber Electromagnetic Activities Strategy


Army Cyber Center Hosts Experiments for Cyber Electromagnetic Activities StrategyThe U.S. Army Cyber Center of Excellence has hosted the 2016 edition of the Cyber Quest event to host experiments designed to address a warfighting challenge to conduct space, cyber electromagnetic operations and maintain communications.

The Army Communications-Electronics Research, Development and Engineering Center said Aug. 16 the experiment held throughout June to July brought together industry, academia and other Army organizations that worked to help provide CEMA situational understanding to commanders.

“As the Army has looked at this space, they have identified cyber electromagnetic requirements and expeditionary mission command requirements as two of the eight top priorities,” said Maj. Gen. Stephen Fogarty, CCoE commanding general.

CERDEC noted that each of the different battle staff elements have visualized respective particular warfighting function under a “User Defined Operational Picture” to provide commanders a holistic view of the CEMA environment.

Col. Timothy Presby, training and doctrine command capability manager, added cyber situational understanding was revealed by a capability-based assessment as the number one gap of the Army’s mission command and cyberspace operational needs.

News
GAO Wants Air Force to Review A-10 Divestment Proposal
by Jay Clemens
Published on August 25, 2016
GAO Wants Air Force to Review A-10 Divestment Proposal


A-10 PCAS testThe Government Accountability Office has asked the U.S. Air Force to revisit the service’s A-10 retirement proposal called on the Defense Department to set quality information requirements for weapon system divestments.

GAO released a report on Wednesday that examines the quality of information the Air Force and DoD used in their A-10 divestment move and practices adopted to estimate cost savings from the divestment.

Auditors claimed to find a lack of quality information from DoD and Air Force on the implications of A-10 divestment such as the gaps that may arise from that decision and the mitigation alternatives.

GAO says any move to divest the fleet will result in reduced capacity and capability in ongoing operations and combatant commander operational plans.

Auditors also found a lack of clear requirements on the part of the Air Force to mitigate potential negative impacts from the planned A-10 divestments and the absence of DoD guidance for quality information that would inform divestment decisions.

GAO wants the Air Force to identify mission gaps, risks and mitigation strategies with regard to the A-10 before the service proposes to divest the fleet.

DoD/News
Defense Science Board Recommends Strategies to Increase DoD Adoption of Autonomous Systems
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on August 25, 2016
Defense Science Board Recommends Strategies to Increase DoD Adoption of Autonomous Systems


PentagonThe Defense Science Board has conducted a 2016 summer study on autonomy that suggests autonomous technology can provide various operational advantages to a wide array of Defense Department missions.

DSB outlined in a June 2016 report three sets of recommendations to help DoD expand the use of self-operating platforms for the military, increase the operational pull for such technology and mature underlying systems for autonomy.

DoD should work to identify methods to address autonomous system engineering, design, acquisition and security challenges as well as establish an autonomy-literate workforce and create new test, modeling and simulation frameworks, according to the board.

The board also recommended that DoD consider deployment of autonomous agents to gather cyber threat intelligence, unmanned undersea vehicles that can function as sea mine countermeasures and organic tactical unmanned aircraft designed to support ground forces.

The department should also adopt an early warning system to study global social movements, intrusion detection tools to secure Internet of Things and autonomous cyber resilience technology for integration into military vehicle systems, the report added.

DSB identified two potential key benefits of autonomy for DoD.

“First, autonomy can increase decision speed, enabling the U.S. to act inside an adversary’s operations cycle.”

“Secondly, ongoing rapid transition of autonomy into warfighting capabilities is vital if the U.S. is to sustain military advantage.”

DoD/News
US Army Tests Integration of Cyber Teams With Maneuver Commanders
by Jay Clemens
Published on August 25, 2016
US Army Tests Integration of Cyber Teams With Maneuver Commanders


Cyber QuestThe U.S. Army has started to explore the potential role of cyber teams in support of maneuver commanders’ efforts to gain situational data within an information environment.

The 1st Infantry Division’s 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team incorporated cyber effects during a recent rotation at Fort Irwin’s National Training Center in late July and August as part of the Cyber Support to Corps and Below pilot program, the Army said Wednesday.

NTC maintains mock cities and villages across mountains and deserts in an area roughly the size of Rhode Island.

Lt. Col. Jon Burnett Burnett, chief of Army Cyber Command’s CSCB, said the CSCB experiments demonstrated that maneuver commanders could gain an advantage in cyberspace.

Maj. Deonand Singh, operations officer for the 781st Military Intelligence Battalion, added that the cyber team carried out activities against an opposing force during this rotation.

The expeditionary team first surveyed the training scenario’s information environment to view the adversary’s activities and transmitted data to an analytical cell for actionable intelligence.

DoD/News
US to Expand Defense Cooperation With Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania Via Joint Declaration
by Jane Edwards
Published on August 25, 2016
US to Expand Defense Cooperation With Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania Via Joint Declaration


military in trainingThe U.S. has reached an agreement with Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania to increase defense cooperation in order to ensure security in the Baltic region amid the evolving security environment there.

The U.S. and the three Baltic States plan to hold regular meetings to discuss national resilience, border security, maritime, ground and aerial defense, transnational threats and law enforcement issues under the joint declaration, the White House said in a news release published Tuesday.

The Baltic States also agreed to set aside budget for defense spending and align the U.S. European Reassurance Initiative and other U.S.-backed deterrence and security measures in support of NATO’s efforts to build up its defense posture and promote regional and national security.

The four countries also plan to expand their cooperation in the areas of cyber defense, critical infrastructure and energy security under the declaration.

The countries reaffirmed their strategic alliance during U.S. Vice President Joe Biden’s visit to Latvia.

Government Technology/News
Army, University of Maryland Scientists Eye Water Electrolyte for Aqueous Lithium Batteries
by Jane Edwards
Published on August 25, 2016
Army, University of Maryland Scientists Eye Water Electrolyte for Aqueous Lithium Batteries


research and development RDScientists from the U.S. Army and the University of Maryland have developed a water electrolyte that might lead to the development of a nonflammable, aqueous lithium battery, the Army reported Monday.

Researchers at the Army Research Laboratory and the university conducted experiments on aqueous batteries and found that the use of high concentrations of salt resulted in the development of a new lithium fluoride layer that is similar to the coating of traditional lithium ion batteries.

“The main problem with lithium ion batteries has always been safety,” said Arthur Von Wald Cresce, a materials scientist at ARL.

“What we’re trying to do is to make sure that the battery remains safe, it remains nonflammable, but that we get as much capacity out of the battery as possible.”

Scientists have started to explore the interaction between the aqueous electrolyte and the negative electrode and plan to identify other anode materials that could be used in succeeding experiments, Cresce added.

Civilian/News
NASA to Study Climate Impact of Smoke in Clouds off Namibian Coast
by Ramona Adams
Published on August 25, 2016
NASA to Study Climate Impact of Smoke in Clouds off Namibian Coast


CloudNASA has sent a team of scientists and two research aircraft to Namibia as part of a mission to study how the interaction of smoke with clouds affects the climate.

The agency said Wednesday its Observations of Aerosols Above Clouds and their Interactions mission aims to determine if atmosphere cools down or warms up when aerosol particles from smoke mix with clouds.

“Human activities currently are estimated to be responsible for perhaps half of all the aerosol particles in the atmosphere,” said Robert Wood, a cloud scientist at the University of Washington and ORACLES deputy principal investigator.

“Smoke particles both reflect sunlight back to space, thus cooling the Earth, and absorb sunlight, which has the opposite effect of warming the Earth,” Wood added.

NASA said study results can facilitate efforts to update regional and global computer models that work to predict the future effects of climate change as well as reveal the impact of aerosols on regional coastal fisheries.

ORACLES will be based in Walvis Bay, Namibia, where NASA’s scientific team will collaborate with faculty and students from the Namibia University of Science and Technology, the space agency added.

The Namib Desert-based Gobabeb Research and Training Centre will provide ground-based remote sensing of the atmosphere for the mission, the agency added.

NASA’s P-3 and ER-2 aircraft will fly up to 20,000 and 65,000 feet, respectively, to collect cloud and aerosol samples that scientists will use to examine the behavior of aerosols in clouds.

ORACLES is a multi-year NASA Earth Venture suborbital investigation that involves more than 100 scientists from five NASA centers, two national laboratories, 10 U.S. universities and five African research institutions.

Earth Venture investigations work to study Earth system processes under NASA’s Earth System Science Pathfinder program.

Government Technology/News
FCC Seeks to Authorize Mobile, Fixed Radio Services to Operate in Spectrum Bands Above 24 GHz
by Jane Edwards
Published on August 25, 2016
FCC Seeks to Authorize Mobile, Fixed Radio Services to Operate in Spectrum Bands Above 24 GHz


FCCSealThe Federal Communications Commission has proposed new rules that would provide licenses for mobile and fixed radio services to use frequencies above 24 gigahertz.

FCC said in a Federal Register notice posted Wednesday its proposed regulations cover flexible use rules for services that operate in the 24 Ghz, 32 Ghz, 42 Ghz, 47 Ghz, 50 Ghz, 70 Ghz and 80 Ghz bands.

FCC plans to adopt the geographic area licensing framework with partial economic area for services that operate between 24 Ghz and 50 Ghz and use a licensing system that is based on the Citizens Broadband Radio Service framework for the 71-76 GHz and 81-86 GHz bands.

The agency also proposed to hold spectrum auction for licenses on Upper Microwave Flexible Use Service bands, open the 3.85 GHz of millimeter wave spectrum for licensed use by mobile services as well as increase the unlicensed spectrum in the 57-71 GHz band to 14 Ghz.

“The commission believes these bands might be able to support expanded sharing, including two-way shared use between federal and non-federal users in these bands and sharing among different types of service platforms,” FCC said in the notice.

The agency said it will continue to collaborate with the satellite industry, wireless providers, National Telecommunications and Information Administration and other federal agencies to address allocation and operation issues in the cited spectrum bands.

Comments to the proposed rule are due Sept. 30, according to the notice.

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