3 juin 2024 | International, Aérospatial

DIU, Air Force pick four firms to prototype modular testing drone

DIU and the Air Force want to use ETV in large numbers to “create an overwhelming dilemma" for an enemy, perhaps making it a candidate for Replicator.

https://www.defensenews.com/air/2024/06/03/diu-air-force-pick-four-firms-to-prototype-modular-testing-drone/

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  • Les industriels du programme Eurodrone s’accordent sur les performances

    29 mai 2020 | International, Aérospatial

    Les industriels du programme Eurodrone s’accordent sur les performances

    Les industriels du programme Eurodrone, à savoir Airbus, Dassault Aviation et Leonardo, et le ministère français des Armées sont parvenus à un accord sur les performances de l'appareil MALE. « Les performances satisfont pour une très large partie les besoins militaires », explique le ministère des Armées à La Tribune. L'Eurodrone doit voler en 2027 pour une mise en service prévue en 2027/2028. La Tribune du 28 mai 2020

  • Air Force to dole out nearly $1 billion for ABMS development

    3 juin 2020 | International, Aérospatial, Sécurité

    Air Force to dole out nearly $1 billion for ABMS development

    Nathan Strout The Air Force will dole out up to $950 million over the next five years to develop and enable its Joint All Domain Command and Control concept, according to a May 29 contract announcement. JADC2 is a new data architecture being pushed primarily by the Air Force for multidomain operations across the service branches. Under JADC2, the Department of Defense wants to connect any sensor to any shooters, regardless of domain. For instance, one aspect of JADC2 is ensuring that data collected by space-based sensors can be processed, transferred to a command-and-control node where it can be fused with other sensor data, and distributed to the appropriate shooter in near-real time. The Air Force has pursued this JADC2 vision by investing in the Advanced Battle Management System family of systems. ABMS seeks to bring the internet of things to the battlefield with an open architecture. The Air Force began testing ABMS last year and is set to conduct its next test in August or September. The Air Force contracts, with a ceiling of $950 million total, will provide maturation, demonstration and proliferation of JADC2-related capabilities across platforms and domains. Contractors will be expected to leverage open-system designs, modern software and algorithm developments to enable the JADC2 vision. Twenty-eight companies will compete for task orders under the new indefinite delivery, indefinite quantity contracts. Several of the vendors selected are not traditional DoD contractors, highlighting the Air Force's desire to include novel commercial approaches to ABMS. “We want a wide variety of companies, and we definitely want fresh blood in the ABMS competition, so there is a lot that can be contributed from companies that are commercially focused, that know a lot about data, that know a lot about machine learning and [artificial intelligence] and know a lot about analytics. Those are going to be the most important parts of the Advanced Battle Management System,” Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics Will Roper told reporters May 14. While the announcement didn't delineate what each of the vendors would bring to the table, multiple vendors on the contract have provided technologies that fit into the JADC2 concept as well. For example, Persistent Systems supports the Wave Relay Tactical Assault Kit program, which provides multidomain communications and situational awareness to Air Force convoys. In a news release, Silvus Technologies announced it would supply its StreamCaster Mobile Ad hoc Networking radio systems for ABMS under the contract. Silvus says its technology can provide a high-bandwidth, tactical-edge network that connects assets across domains. That technology fits into meshONE, a part of ABMS focused on battlefield networks. MeshONE was used in the December 2019 ABMS test, and the new contract will provide more equipment for future tests. No funds were issued at the time of the award. Work is expected to be completed May 26, 2025. https://www.c4isrnet.com/battlefield-tech/it-networks/2020/06/02/air-force-to-dole-out-nearly-1-billion-for-abms-development/

  • La France, l’Allemagne et l’Espagne lancent le chantier de rénovation du Tigre

    2 novembre 2020 | International, Aérospatial

    La France, l’Allemagne et l’Espagne lancent le chantier de rénovation du Tigre

    La France, l'Allemagne et l'Espagne s'apprêtent à lancer en novembre la phase de réalisation du programme d'hélicoptère d'attaque « Tigre standard 3 » sur la base d'une coopération entre les trois pays. La France va embarquer le nouveau missile de MBDA dans ce futur Tigre au standard 3, selon La Tribune. Le MAST-F a une capacité de neutralisation de combattants, de cibles blindées et d'infrastructures, de jour comme de nuit jusqu'à 8 000 mètres. La Tribune du 30 octobre 2020

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