Vol. 94 No. 670, September 2009
Index
- Program terminations invariably have unintended consequences.
- Attracting new blood tougher than building jets and ICBMs.
- Fewer new programs for industry, but still plenty of work.
- Going private: military to expand outsourcing of weapons maintenance.
- Pentagon to revamp IT buying practices.
- Unpiloted aircraft not coming soon to Navy carrier decks.
- Inside the box: self-storage facilities eye sensors to detect terrorist threats.
- International gateway airports proposed for small aircraft.
- Lack of funding leads to federal building security failures.
- Clarification.
- Correction.
- DHS inspector general slams secure border initiative oversight.
- Body language takes on new meaning in PC world.
- At the age of 50, it's time for DARPA to rethink its future.
- Achieving balance over time.
- National security and energy: setting the right priorities.
- Wild, wild west: in the fight against cybercrime, weapons have short shelf lives.
- Unfit for duty? Navy rethinks how it maintains surface combatants.
- Navy probes commercial ship operators for repair tips.
- Higher prices and more failures predicted for defense electronics.
- Explosive threats: feds begin to tackle the vexing problem of how to defeat homemade bombs.
- Tech vs. terrorism.
- The thin watery line: plans under way to beef up porous northern border.
- Electric propulsion enables leap in exploration.
- Sun power: advanced solar generators move to market in 2010.
- Army tank rounds safely demilitarized.
- Device offers quick translation of damaged documents in seconds.
- More proficient checkpoint x-ray sensor unveiled.
- Tighter rules for conflicts of interest.
- NDIA calendar: upcoming exhibits, shows and events.