Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
In Japan, DoD appears to have both an insufficient number of health care employees and a large unemployed health care workforce ready to answer the call.
Leslie Beavers, the principal deputy CIO for DoD, said a key focus for the near future is to improve the warfighter’s experience in using IT.
Lawmakers agreed to increase the amount of money DoD can reallocate without prior permission from Congress, but rejected other calls for budget flexibility.
PEO EIS is shifting to agile software development, applying rigor of FinOps, while also making sure cybersecurity is top of mind.
Budget instabilities and limited application of new acquisition pathways stall defense innovation efforts, a new report finds.
Using four-phase "horizon" process, Navy balances user experience and security to bring innovative services to the enterprise.
The Army CIO expects the service's new software development policy will bring better capabilities to soldiers faster.
Steve Wallace, the director of emerging technology at DISA, said a new tool, called Concierge AI, will reduce the friction to the user to find and analyze data.
Shery Thomas, the cyber technology officer for the Marine Corps Cyberspace Command, said network consolidation is helping improve zero trust efforts.
Public and private sector organizations can reduce friction and make employees lives easier by leaning into tools like Slack, says the company's Rob Seaman.
Private 5G networks allow DoD to replicate real-world environments for training, as well as enable new technologies. But it needs a foundation.
As part of its move to the cloud, the Defense Department needs to integrate data and platforms to drive better, faster decisions, Qlik’s federal VP says.
The defense industrial base roster of companies keeps shrinking, and supply chain snags have become constant.
As in the rest of government, DoD's 2025 proposal would give civilian employees a 2% raise.