Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
DHS has a new chief information security officer, while the State Department has a new chief data officer and HHS names the first chief artificial intelligence officer as these are some of the changes in the federal technology community over the last few weeks.
National Defense Magazine Managing Editor Jon Harper joins host Derrick Dortch on this week's Fed Access to discuss President-elect Joe Biden's defense spending priorities and how they will impact the Department of Defense.
A cross-functional team is working on specific steps to implement an electromagnetic spectrum operations strategy DoD released in October.
The Special Access Program Corporate Portfolio Program, begun as a pilot in 2016, became permanent last month.
The new service will set up an intelligence center within a year, that will develop from the two core space squadrons.
Two years after the Navy decentralized its cloud acquisitions, it's bringing all of them back under one program executive office's umbrella.
For what they plan to do, Federal Drive with Tom Temin spoke to the vice president and general manager of the Consortium Sal D'Itri.
Marine Corps Air Station Miramar is planning on expanding its 5G coverage in the first four months of 2021.
The Navy is celebrating the 78th anniversary of Naval Air Force Atlantic. 78 happens to be the hull number of the Navy's newest aircraft carrier, the U.S.S. Gerald R. Ford.
The Pentagon needs to focus on software, culture and placing bets on nontraditional companies, experts say.
DoD will spend $23 billion on housing allowances in 2021, for an average increase of just under 3%. But the increases — or decreases — vary dramatically by locale. Here's the full list of which areas will see the biggest BAH changes.
The Navy crushed its retention goals for 2020, most likely because of COVID-19.
A whole swath of professions will lose special pay if Congress can't override the NDAA veto.
DARPA's vision of how Joint All-Domain Command and Control could work contrasts with DoD's current approach to systems-of-systems, which the agency views as more of a jigsaw puzzle than a mosaic.