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Small Businesses Awarded Telecommunications Contracts
Long Wave Incorporated, Oklahoma City (N39430-14-D-1422); SiteMaster Incorporated, Tulsa, Oklahoma (N39430-14-D-1
HART Technologies Wins Rapid Prototyping Contract
HART Technologies, Manassas, Virginia, is being awarded a $32,182,700 indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract with cost-plus-fixed-fee completion and
Leonie Awarded Afghanistan Information Support Contract
Leonie Industries LLC, Pacific Palisades, California, was awarded a $55,449,092 firm-fixed-price competitive contract for the Military Information Support
Rockwell Collins to Provide GPS Software Security
Rockwell Collins Incorporated, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, has been awarded a $20,022,313 modification (P00017) to FA8807-12-C-0013 for software coding and sec
Raytheon to Provide P-8A Radar Kits
Raytheon Company, McKinney, Texas, is being awarded a $50,121,721 modification to a previously awarded firm-fixed-price, cost-plus-fixed-fee contract (N00019-
Edifice-Schlosser Receives Missile Defense Netted Sensor System Contract
Edifice-Schlosser Joint Venture, Hyattsville, Maryland, was awarded a $17,891,000 firm-fixed-price contract for the Joint Land Attack Cruise Missile Defense Elevated Netted Sensor System. U.S.
Lockheed to Fix F-16 Radar Interoperability Issue for Pakistan and Thailand
Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co., Fort Worth, Texas, has been awarded a $7,253,896 modification (P00068) to FA8615-07-C-6032 for F-16
Navy Scientists Create Harder Ceramic for Armor Windows
Scientists with the U.S. Naval Research Lab are the first to succeed at creating a ceramic window for all types of military vehicles that is not only 50 percent harder than current materials, but lighter, more crack resistant and likely to be a cost-saving endeavor, researchers say.

The Bottom Line: JIE Revolutionizes Transformation
The military’s evolving environment stands on the strong shoulders of the past to reach for the clouds.
Researchers to Mirror Brain in Developing Better Computers
Sandia National Laboratories researchers are developing “neuro-inspired” computing systems to work basically like human brains.