The Massachusetts base, Hanscom, recently moved its Air Force portal to an Amazon Web Services Cloud.
John Sherman, the Intelligence Community’s chief information officer, wanted to tamp down any rumors about why the IC signed a deal to bring Microsoft’s cloud into the mix.
Three different events show how lawmakers and vendors are getting more involved in the ongoing contest around JEDI.
The Alliance for Digital Innovation is expected to launch this week with a goal of promoting adoption of commercial technologies in the federal sector.
Coalition for Government Procurement President Roger Waldron says a single award DoD Enterprise Cloud Acquisition contract would risk locking-in DoD to a single approach.
For success in the cloud, manage your data
David Rubal, chief technologist for Data & Analytics and principal data scientist at DLT, joins host John Gilroy on this week's Federal Tech Talk to discuss how his company can help federal agencies use and understand big data. October 3, 2017
Former federal CIO Tony Scott and former SSA CIO Rob Klopp are both launched new companies while Mark Schwartz, the outgoing CIO at USCIS, announced he’s heading to Amazon Web Services.
Beth Killoran, the chief information officer at the Department of Health and Human Services, said over the past two years the agency went from having about 1 percent of all systems in the cloud to an expected 41 percent by the end of 2017.
Joe Dickman, senior vice president at Vizuri, joins host John Gilroy on this week's Federal Tech Talk to discuss Red Hat, Amazon Web Services, Cloud Docker and other tools inside Vizuri’s federal toolbox. February 14, 2017
Teresa Carlson, who leads the Amazon Web Services (AWS) Worldwide Public Sector business, was named the Executive of the Year for companies $300 million and greater as part of the 2016 Greater Washington GovCon Awards, which are presented by the Northern Virginia Chamber of Commerce.
FedRAMP is boasting increased authorizations and return business, and the new dashboard is making it easier for feds to use the program.
Intelligence agencies open doors to long-awaited cloud marketplace, invite analysts and developers to tinker with commercial technologies.
More companies are trying to reach DISA's impact level 5 since DoD has such a high demand to store sensitive information.
DoD approved IBM to be its second Level 5 security cloud provider just as FedRAMP is finalizing its high baseline standard.