Hypersonics, autonomous systems top DepSecDef nom’s emerging-tech priorities
Feinberg said it’s time to “move away from expensive, overly sophisticated platforms that take years to develop.”
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Feinberg said it’s time to “move away from expensive, overly sophisticated platforms that take years to develop.”
A 10th Mountain Division brigade commander talks electronic-warfare, innovation, and something he’d never experienced in the Army.
Shakeup may also consolidate service PEO functions and put more R&D costs on industry, a Pentagon source says.
A better way to check and store qubits could enable big applications for smarter drones, better processing, and doing much more with less.
Piasecki resurrects a 1950s concept to chart a new path toward uncrewed supply.
“Being able to talk to other agencies real-time certainly would assist in that response,” one official said.
A long-ago U.S. test showed the kind of havoc that could wreak in orbit.
A new form of atomic radio detection could protect sensitive communications from hackers—or reveal hidden adversaries.
Raytheon gets $10 million to develop energy “webs” that could keep drones in the air indefinitely.
Tracking hypersonic missiles across oceans is like trying to “find a cup of tea that you’ve dropped into a swimming pool.”