The Defense Department wants the contracting community to embrace a new policy that could upend the annual procurement cycle for major weapons systems.
The U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM) has its very own technology incubator. SOFWERX is part of the Doolittle Institute, an organization that facilitates collaborations between military and private industry, and fulfills that role specifically for special operations forces.
The Army's Rapid Capabilities Office is looking for ways to apply AI and machine learning to signal classification.
The DoD IG says there are trends keeping small businesses from working with the military.
The White House is considering two executive orders and lawmakers are adding provisions to bills trying to limit agency exposure to Chinese made technology.
Industry associations’ concerns grow about e-commerce portal with language in the 2019 Defense Authorization bill.
The Pentagon wants vendors to take no more than two months to develop their final proposals when purchasing its weapons systems.
Industry says the Defense Digital Service is wedded to an approach to move to commercial cloud and the lack of open and transparent discussions is causing concerns.
Chris Howard, the vice president of federal sales for Nutanix, explains why a multi-cloud environment for the military makes more sense.
Three different events show how lawmakers and vendors are getting more involved in the ongoing contest around JEDI.
Stew Magnuson, editor-in-chief of National Defense Magazine, joins host Derrick Dortch on this week's Fed Access to discuss artificial intelligence, army robotics, hypersonic missiles and other advances in military technology.
Eric Crusius, a partner with Holland & Knight law firm, details why the Section 809 panel shouldn’t tinker too much with bid protest rules.
The Homeland Security Department and the Department of Defense are transforming this Pensacola, Florida, into a cyber powerhouse.
DoD releases a draft solicitation and holds an industry day to talk about its new initiative to move to commercial cloud services.
The Pentagon awards a contract to REAN Cloud that could be worth up to $950 million while also facing a protest of a supporter services contract.