Vol. 92 No. 648, November 2007
Index
- Plenty of resources, but even greater demand.
- How astronomical war budgets threaten U.S. National Security.
- Department of Energy.
- I don't know that robotics.
- Marines and Navy at odds over ship priorities.
- Ship woes: Navy should have known better.
- Training the drivers.
- Turf battles over drones far from over.
- Unmanned aircraft: 'a ridiculous situation'.
- Defense Department task forces to beef up disaster response.
- Coast Guard program successfully collecting biometric data at sea.
- Immigration's computer system emerging from 'stone age'.
- Medical device being marketed for homeland security applications.
- Physical, privacy limits of domestic spy satellites questioned.
- Remotely sensing soldiers' distress.
- No accidents: Pentagon publishes new safety guidelines for unmanned vehicles.
- Units that work with civilians often disregarded, soldiers claim.
- Homeland security policies overlook essential issues, says shipping executive.
- License to boat? Government lacks clear plans to ID small vessels used as terrorist weapons.
- Defense system detects swarming boats in coastal waters.
- Sounding alarms: shipbuilders forecast exodus of submarine designers.
- R&D outlook: Defense Department should refocus technology spending, experts warn.
- 'DARPA hard: research agency wants help solving the seemingly impossible.
- Proof of identity: U.S. government driving the advance of biometric technologies.
- Sea services: facing uncertainty, Navy contemplates 'alternative futures'.
- Fast steel on target? Electric guns on Navy ships: not yet on the horizon.
- Underwater killers: Navy's mine-hunting technologies wait for the Littoral Combat Ship.
- Powering the fleet: all-electric ship could begin to take shape by 2012.
- Energy efficient: Pentagon pursuing more advanced solar cells.
- High definition imaging in the dark is a snap.
- Moving targets no problem with advanced sight.
- New nickel hydride charger.
- Sunlight is no obstacle for this notebook.
- Portable barricades sent to Iraq.
- Sensors would warn of aircraft fatigue.
- Simulation software helps paint humvees.
- Science--Technology Engineering--Mathematics.
- Transforming Air Force intelligence.
- Ethical lapses provide valuable training tool.
- NDIA events calendar.