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The Army got into trouble with an important cybersecurity contract when it made a classic mistake of not awarding it on the basis it said it would.
The pandemic and resulting strain on the federal information technology infrastructure has brightened the spotlight on the need for IT modernization.
Business activity might be nearly choked off, but this is a busy country. People are still thinking, creating, Congress is still doing its thing.
In today's Federal Newscast, the world's favorite web site right now is about to get a fresh chunk of federal grant money.
For a review of NASA's top technology priorities and how it's getting them done through the pandemic, Chief Technologist Douglas Terrier spoke to Federal Drive with Tom Temin.
GPO IT specialist David Thibodeau not only 3D printed face shields and other small items for hospital employees, he built the 3D printer to make them.
The Defense Department has not one but three cyber hygiene initiatives. But they're incomplete and no one is reporting what's going on.
In today's Federal Newscast, Senators say the Office of Personnel Management has refused briefings on the topic of guiding the government through the pandemic.
A pandemic manages to produce both terror and boredom.
The situation is fluid, but coronavirus dollars are still flowing through federal agencies with more to come.
An expert on China, Dr. Paul Heer recently retired and joined the Center for the National Interest, a think tank devoted to, in its words, a voice for strategic realism in U.S. Foreign Policy.
In today's Federal Newscast, as agencies are developing their plans to reopen offices, the National Treasury Employees Union releases its own conditions.
Air traffic control is never easy work, but now controllers are concerned about coronavirus, working cheek by jowl in sometimes cramped airport control towers.
Housing and Urban Development and Small Business Administration -- have become first responders. First economic responders, thanks to the series of money-printing bills Congress is passing.