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March 7, 2022 | International, Aerospace, Naval, Land, C4ISR

La Chine va augmenter ses dépenses militaires en 2022

La Chine a annoncé ce samedi l'augmentation de ses dépenses militaires, à hauteur de 7,1% en 2022. L'annonce a été faite par le ministère des Finances, à l'ouverture de la session plénière annuelle de l'Assemblée nationale populaire (ANP, le Parlement chinois). Ce pourcentage est en hausse par rapport à 2021 (+6,8%). Il s'agit de la plus forte progression depuis 2019 (+7,5%). Le Figaro précise que « avec cette enveloppe de 1 450 milliards de yuans (230 Md$), la Chine dispose du deuxième budget de défense mondial, après les États-Unis (740 Md$ prévus pour 2022) ». La progression des dépenses militaires chinoises est nettement supérieure à la croissance attendue du PIB, fixée samedi par le Premier ministre Li Keqiang à 5,5% pour l'année en cours.

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  • What reduced size, weight and power mean on the battlefield

    August 22, 2018 | International, C4ISR

    What reduced size, weight and power mean on the battlefield

    Computers on the battlefield take a beating. Beyond the everyday wear and tear, they also must endure extreme temperatures and often violent vibrations. To help ensure its systems give soldiers and commanders the information they need, the Army relies on its Mounted Family of Computer Systems program. Known as MfoCS, pronounced em-fox, the program covers detachable tablets to fully-loaded, vehicle-mounted workstations. C4ISRNET spoke recently with Bill Guyan, vice president of business development for Leonardo DRS, about advances in battlefield computing. C4ISRNET: We hear a lot about a new emphasis on the hardening of security of contractors. And not just contractors, but primes, and then their contractors. Obviously this has become a point of concern for DOD leadership. Bill Guyan: One of the big areas of emphasis for the Army in the procurement of the [Mounted Family of Computer Systems] (MFoCS) and particularly MFoC2 II, were areas related to security, both from a cyber security standpoint and the ability to assure that the system was free from malware or any external threat. So there's a very comprehensive supply chain risk management strategy put in place and for this program we believe that this is the most secure edge computing system that the Army's ever purchased. It's absolutely critical that it be so, since ultimately there will be somewhere between a 100,000 and 125,000 of these systems fielded across the Army and Marine Corps, at the edge of the battlefield with each one of these systems serving as potential on ramp to the network and in an area of situational awareness that is absolutely mission critical. There was a time when we derived quick benefit from having an advantage and a capability that our opponents didn't. And over time the capability has evolved from a nice to have capability to a mission critical capability that we'd be hard pressed to fight without. C4ISRNET: The Army has put a lot of emphasis on size, weight and power. Can you explain how that manifests itself on the battlefield? Guyan: We optimize size, weight and power in two ways. At the hardware level we optimize by staying at the leading edge of available technologies, available commercial technologies and rapidly adapting and adopting them for employment in this mission critical extreme environment. The computers and displays are the soldiers' path to the network. It has to work at -40 centigrade and it has to work at 80 degrees centigrade. It has to work in extreme vibration and it has to work in contested EMI environments. It has to work all the time. For example, we led the charge in the adoption and fielding of solid state hard drives versus rotating media, which allowed us to not only improve the resiliency of the system, but also to reduce size, because we no longer have to isolate the rotating hard drive from the shock and vibration. We also migrated from the old backlight technology to an LED backlight, which is much more reliable, particularly in shock vibration at temperature extremes. But it also requires far less power. The other thing that we've been able to do is rapidly adapt the latest processor technologies when they're available. Of course, processors continue to get faster, smaller, and use less power. We're able to make sure that every generation of system can deliver more computing capability for less power, and less power means less heat. Full article: https://www.c4isrnet.com/show-reporter/technet-augusta/2018/08/21/what-reduced-size-weight-and-power-mean-on-the-battlefield/

  • Navy creating unmanned, AI operations hub within US Southern Command

    April 4, 2023 | International, Naval, C4ISR

    Navy creating unmanned, AI operations hub within US Southern Command

    The service said that, following the success of Task Force 59 in the Middle East, it would bring unmanned and AI operations to Central and South America.

  • Leonardo signs contract with Malaysia for two ATR 72 MPA

    May 25, 2023 | International, Aerospace

    Leonardo signs contract with Malaysia for two ATR 72 MPA

    This contract follows the selection of the solution offered by Leonardo announced last October, and includes the supply of two ATR Special Mission aircraft in Maritime Patrol configuration plus the...

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