Vol. 94 No. 677, April 2010
Index
- Trained, disciplined professionals are key to acquisition excellence.
- Defense industry and the federal debt.
- The "President's Perspective".
- To defense industry, the future looks uncomfortably unfamiliar.
- Can DARPA rescue the Pentagon from its acquisition doldrums?
- Defense contracting methods stifle innovation.
- Shortage of acquisition workers: It depends on how you look at it.
- Screened out: Troubled TSA weathers brutal year as questions arise about its technologies.
- Making metals lighter, but stronger than steel.
- Non-metal structure lightens military truck.
- 'Digital backbone': Software helps soldiers cope with electronics clutter aboard trucks.
- Crude but deadly: JIEDDO chief seeks help as roadside bombs plague Afghanistan.
- Mobile simulators give soldiers early roadside bomb training.
- Drone fever: army on a fast track to build its own high-tech air force.
- Combat aviation: New attitudes about UAVs shape Army's scout helicopter program.
- U.S. helicopter suppliers fear losing innovation war.
- The Osprey's growing pains: she is high maintenance, but marines love her anyway.
- Trick question: How much does the Pentagon pay for a gallon of gas?
- Renewable energy: Navy taps oceans for power.
- Greening the fleet: Navy's energy reform initiatives raise concerns among Shipbuilders.
- Perils at sea: Somali piracy tactics evolve: threats could expand globally.
- Maritime security: Navy's littoral combat ship to share duties with Coast Guard.
- Surveillance Technology can help identify hostile vessels.
- Identity markers: Face, iris and fingerprint biometrics good.
- Social media: TSA takes to the blogosphere to set the record straight.
- What contractors should know about tax certification.
- Teachers stand ready: to advance science education.
- April.