How the Pentagon will experiment with 5G
Pentagon leaders have begun to describe in greater detail the types of 5G experimentation they have in mind, and what they hope to achieve.
Pentagon leaders have begun to describe in greater detail the types of 5G experimentation they have in mind, and what they hope to achieve.
Maj. Gen. David Isaacson, the Army’s director of networks, services and strategy, discusses one potential benefit of 5G: "The physical security component, the way that posts, camps and stations physically protect the gates. There's an opportunity to automate much of that capacity."
Military leaders say they are gearing up for change.
For Department of Defense artificial intelligence efforts to succeed, they must target the right infrastructure.
Lt. Gen. Jack Shanahan, director of the Joint Artificial Intelligence Center, talks about drawing new lines of AI effort.
With nearly a $1 billion bankroll, Defense Department leaders and the intelligence community are looking for the best ways to leverage this emerging capability most effectively.
U.S. Special Operations Command's chief information officer, Lisa Costa, explains how the organization is thinking about the latest networking technology.
In 2012, then-Defense Secretary Leon Panetta warned that a cyber attack on critical infrastructure could have catastrophic consequences rivaling Pearl Harbor.
The vision: to embed interconnected, high-power computing capability into a wide array of drones, soldier-worn sensors and vehicle-mounted ISR tools. So what's the reality?
The Army’s emerging tactical network vision would make SATCOM virtually ubiquitous and easier to use.