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The Army has issued a request for information, asking cloud vendors to describe their capabilities in more than 30 separate areas that could help it move its applications from government data centers to modern commercial hosting environments.
The new DoD policy creates specialists to oversee IT, construction and medical services that work closely with department components.
Federal News Radio counts down our 10 most-read Defense and Intelligence Community stories from 2015.
Talent acquisition manager Mike Bruni will discuss job trends in the federal government, the kinds of workers that agencies need, and how to land a job in what is a competitive and challenging federal market. January 1, 2016
The Defense Department will have to fill Congress in on certain conditions surrounding multi-year contracts 30 days before they are awarded if a new proposed rule is adopted.
Gen. Joseph Dunford, the new chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. says he plans to do his part to respond to congressional criticism over ballooning bureaucracies at the Pentagon.
The Air Force’s 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron spends its summer and fall flying into hurricanes. In the winter season, it flies around blizzards to measure wind speed and trajectory. Federal News Radio reporter Scott Maucione caught up with the squadron’s Chief Meteorologist Lt. Col. Jon Talbot to find how just how they do it and shared that report on Federal Drive with Tom Temin.
The Defense Department's advanced research agency is looking for technologies that fit third offset plans.
A DoD Inspector General report found the department's cloud policy may have monetary and cybersecurity risks.
Pentagon budget officials say they got 95 percent what they wanted for 2016. In passing its omnibus appropriations bill, Congress boosted the Defense Department by about $30 billion. What will it buy? Bloomberg Government Senior Defense Analyst Rob Levinson offers some answers on Federal Drive with Tom Temin.
In Wednesday's federal headlines, the White House released a cyber deterrence policy after repeated calls from Congress to do so.
The Obama administration will use law enforcement and even military force to deter cyber attacks in new policy.
Departments will soon begin to randomly investigate security clearance holders twice every five years.
DHS' Privacy Office made a number of policy changes to clamp down on privacy after high profile cyber attacks on companies and the government.