Vol. 94 No. 676, March 2010
Index
- Defense budget and quadrennial review sidestep critical issues.
- Collecting intelligence.
- UAV turf wars.
- Acquisition reform.
- Fixed-price contracts.
- More fuel please!(READERS' FORUM) (Letter to the editor)
- Day of reckoning ahead for U.S. defense spending.
- Pentagon study: military aviation industrial not in trouble.
- Quadrennial review: Pentagon needs better grasp of U.S. industrial base.
- Should acquisition workers train like soldiers?
- Up in the air: no need to rethink 'no-fly' list criteria, say intelligence chiefs.
- Airlines collecting exit data from travelers still possible, DHS official says.
- Give police a seat at the Homeland Security policy table, says Sheriff.
- Put the 'H.S.' back in DHS, says leading department critic.
- Taking 'heads-up' displays to the next level.
- 'Wi-Fi in the sky'.
- An X-ray machine for nukes.
- Backpack-wearing cockroaches to detect radiation.
- Tunnel detection system digs deeper.
- The enemy the Pentagon should fear most: health care.
- Government contracting culture impedes progress in cybersecurity.
- Munitions industry prepares for downturn.
- Final stretch: builders of the Navy's littoral combat ship pull out all the stops.
- Next generation: future remotely piloted aircraft will do more than surveillance.
- Army weighs future of unmanned helicopters.
- If you can't afford a UAV, rent one.
- Navy to do without prime contractors on new bomb disposal robots.
- DARPA to take on major new robotics initiative.
- Shifting sailors workload to robots still wishful thinking.
- Navy's acquisition methods slow down deployment of undersea robots.
- Defense contractors must effectively monitor consultants.
- ICAF doubles numbers of private industry students.
- STEM edutainment: now showing in classrooms.
- NDIA calendar.