DoD's big spending plans for cloud aren't just about JEDI. A final RFP for the department's $8.2 billion contract for cloud-hosted office and collaboration systems is expected sometime in June.
The Air Force isn't waiting for DoD's JEDI procurement before it starts moving its applications to commercially-operated cloud environments. DISA's milCloud 2.0 is among the options its found to be surprisingly attractive.
The Defense Information Systems Agency plans to fully roll out eApp as a replacement to current Election Questionnaires for Investigations Processing (e-QIP) system toward the end of the fiscal year.
The Pentagon is still searching for a replacement for the Common Access Card. One solution under active consideration: measuring the way you walk, via your smartphone.
Federal News Radio took to social media to share with you how the federal agencies are honoring those who have fallen for Memorial Day
In today's Federal Newscast, a new proposal rolls back what the White House deems over-regulation of the commercial space launch industry.
DoD needs to take into account data management and security as it migrates to cloud.
DISA's milCloud 2.0 is about to get a wave of new customers, thanks to a Pentagon mandate to move "fourth estate" applications to the new service.
A May 7 memo from the Defense Department's chief information officers gives "fourth estate" agencies until 2020 to migrate applications from more than 100 data centers.
The House Armed Services Committee's version of the annual Defense bill lets DISA continue to operate, but it strips DISA's acquisition, cyber defense missions.
The president of Allen Federal Business Partners said opinions on DISA vary between new and established contractors, but that it's highly possible the recommendations make their way into the upcoming defense authorization bill.
With waves of threats of that magnitude, machine learning and artificial intelligence come into play with DISA's Acropolis.
The Pentagon slashes the potential value of REAN Cloud's OTA from $950 million to $65 million, says only U.S. Transportation Command can use it.
Army Corps' working on cyber and user services roadmap to make processes and cloud transition more 'reliable, agile, and capable.'
DoD releases eight questions and answers on highly-anticipated cloud project, most of which amount to "stay tuned."