6 septembre 2022 | International, Aérospatial

How one Air Force office eliminates barriers to digital transformation

Decision to heavily rely on new design and manufacturing techniques made the program the poster child for the potential of digital engineering.

https://www.c4isrnet.com/air/2022/09/06/how-one-air-force-office-eliminates-barriers-to-digital-transformation/

Sur le même sujet

  • Safran Helicopter Engines remporte un contrat de maintenance pour l’armée de l’Air néerlandaise

    30 juin 2020 | International, Aérospatial

    Safran Helicopter Engines remporte un contrat de maintenance pour l’armée de l’Air néerlandaise

    Safran Helicopter Engines vient de remporter un contrat pluriannuel avec l'armée de l'Air royale néerlandaise pour la maintenance des moteurs Makila équipant sa flotte d'hélicoptères Airbus Helicopters AS532U2 Cougar Mk.II. À la suite d'un appel d'offres public, le contrat officialise un accord de maintenance, de réparation et de révision portant sur 40 moteurs Makila 1A2, jusqu'à leur fin de vie. Air & Cosmos du 29 juin 2020

  • French military receives initial batch of new Serval armored vehicles

    6 mai 2022 | International, Terrestre

    French military receives initial batch of new Serval armored vehicles

    The upgrades are part of France's multibillion-euro Scorpion program, which aims to field a new set of combat and transport vehicles to the armed forces.

  • German Cabinet approves new cybersecurity agency

    4 septembre 2018 | International, C4ISR

    German Cabinet approves new cybersecurity agency

    By: Sebastian Sprenger COLOGNE, Germany – Germany is one step closer to getting its own version of a Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, as officials here seek to bolster the country's cybersecurity posture. The Cabinet of Chancellor Angela Merkel this week approved the new organization, to be headed jointly by the Defense and Interior ministries. The outfit is slated to get a budget of €200 million ($230 million) between 2019 and 2022. The new “Agency for Innovation in Cybersecurity” will eventually have 100 employees. The German parliament, the Bundestag, will debate the proposal in the upcoming months. Once the funding is cleared, analysts will begin their work in earnest next year. While the Pentagon's DARPA served as a model in creating the new organization, the American agency's funding and personnel commitment dwarfs that of new German effort. But the move is still a major step forward here because it shows a political commitment to cyberspace in the context of defense and security that officials said was previously lacking. Notably, one of the explicit goals is to speed up the acquisition cycle for cybersecurity technology. That puts Germany in the same boat as many governments around the world, where officials have found themselves perennially lagging behind sophisticated attack schemes employed by hackers. Full article: https://www.fifthdomain.com/global/europe/2018/08/31/german-cabinet-approves-new-cybersecurity-agency

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