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Big Data Is Driving Information Technology Planning and Investment
This rarely happens, but for 2014, defense and technology analysts are in agreement that big data and cybersecurity are the two drivers in planning and investment for information technology, both in government and in industry. Most everything else will be enabling these two key capabilities. While much attention has been focused on the threats and work being done globally on cybersecurity, I want to focus on big data.
Big data is critical because, unless it is collected, analyzed, managed and made ubiquitously available, many analysts and decision makers will be buried in information they cannot use effectively in a timely fashion. It also is the starting and ending point for many of the technologies and capabilities we care about: networks, data centers, cloud initiatives, storage, search, analytics and secure access
Novel Big Data Reveals Global Human Behavior
Researchers Develop One-of-a-Kind Nanocomputer
PLEXSYS Supports AWACS Simulation
PLEXSYS Supports AWACS Simulation
Iraq, Thailand Procure Inertial Navigation Systems
Northrop Grumman Guidance and Electronics Company Inc., Woodland Hills, Calif., has been awarded a $200 million indefinite-delivery/i
Northrop Grumman Receives P-8A Support Contract
New Year, New Mobile Capabilities for Defense Department Users
The U.S. Defense Department will deploy version 1.0 of its unclassified mobility capability on January 31 with plans to expand the capacity to support up to 100,000 users by the end of the fiscal year. The Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) is the lead agency for the program and has made substantial progress toward delivering the capability.
Scientists Developing 'X-Ray Vision' Using Wi-Fi Signal
Researchers have taken the concept of radar and sonar imaging a step further to track people, even through walls. Wi-Vi, which Dina Katabi and her graduate student Fadel Adib are developing at MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, transmits a low-power Wi-Fi signal and uses its reflections to track human movement.
Soldiers Check Out Next-Generation Combat Technologies
