U.S. officials say Army leaders will announce on Friday that they've chosen Austin as the location for a new command headquarters that will focus on how to modernize the service and prepare for future wars
The Air Force was lucky this time. But it better go and make sure its servers and routers are patched.
The Defense Innovation Board, tasked by Congress with finding ways to lower DoD's software acquisition costs and speed projects up, says the department needs to begin by asking different questions of its development teams.
The Defense Department's chief information officer says cloud adoption is too important to mess up.
House Democrats are increasing their pressure on President Donald Trump to rescind his recent executive orders on official time and collective bargaining.
The Air Force is considering bringing back old planes to serve as drones.
Bloomberg Government editorial director Loren Duggan joined Federal Drive with Tom Temin for his weekly look ahead at Congress.
The Defense Information Systems Agency used an Other Transaction Agreement to perform the work, so its scope is unclear. And at least for now, so is the winning firm's identity.
A pilot program is making it easier for recent veterans with military trucking licenses to transition into civilian occupations.
Military spouses face unemployment three times higher than their civilian counterparts. One group has come forward to help to turn that around.
Each of the military services are facing shortages of pilots, especially combat pilots, which defense officials have tended to blame on increasing demand from the commercial airline industry.
In today's Federal Newscast, almost three dozen former military officers and officials said the ban undermines national security.
With a November industry day, the Army is planning a year of pilots to test "smart city" technologies on its bases.
The Air Force Reserves Command, like the Air Force itself, has a constant need for flight engineers. But it takes a long time to develop and train flight engineers.
In today's Federal Newscast, according to an assessment of its own workforce, nearly have of senior leaders at the Food and Drug Administration are eligible to retire in the next two years.