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         Defense Department:     more books (100)
  1. Section 1206 of the National Defense Authorization Act for FY2006: A fact sheet on Department of Defense authority to train and equip foreign military ... Service (CRS) Reports and Issue Briefs by Nina M. Serafino, 2009-03-01
  2. Studies of calibration standards used in the Department of Defense equipment oil analysis program by Danold W. Golightly, 1973-01-01
  3. Environmental Management in Proactive Commercial Firms: Lessons for Central Logistics Activities in the Department of Defense by Frank Camm, 2001-04-25
  4. Defense Department acquisition directory.(2007 MEGA DIRECTORY)(Directory): An article from: National Defense by Gale Reference Team, 2007-08-01
  5. Joint logistics--shaping our future: a personal perspective: the Department of Defense's senior logistician offers some thoughts on the collaborative network ... essay): An article from: Army Logistician by C.V. Christianson, 2006-07-01
  6. Methods and Actions for Improving Performance of the Department of Defense Disability Evaluation System 2002 by Cheryl Y. Marcum, 2002-03-25
  7. The Department of Defense: Documents on Organization and Mission, 1978-2003
  8. "Security review" and the First Amendment.(Department of Defense Principles for News Media): An article from: Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy by William E. Lee, 2002-03-22
  9. Department of Defense Financial Management: Past, Present, and Future.: An article from: Armed Forces Comptroller by Frank Murphy, 2000-06-22
  10. Dictionary of Military Terms: Us Department of Defense by United States Department of Defense, 1995-09
  11. Submitted statement to the House Armed Services Committee.: An article from: U.S. Department of Defense Speeches by Robert M. Gates, 2009-05-13
  12. The U.S. Military Online: A Directory for Internet Access to the Department of Defense by William M. Arkin, 1998-12
  13. Department of Defense Political Appointments: Positions and Process by National Defense Research Institute (U. S.), 2001-05
  14. Energy Effects of Ending the Department of Defense's Use of Chemicals That Deplete Stratospheric Ozone by Frank A. Camm, Beth E. Lachman, et all 1994-08

41. Wired News: Hacker Raises Stakes In DOD Attacks
Analyzer, the selfprofessed mentor and teacher of two teens accused of hacking US government servers, said he still has access to more than 400 defense department machines. Wired News
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,10730,00.html
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Hacker Raises Stakes in DOD Attacks
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10:20 AM Mar. 05, 1998 PT An 18-year-old hacker living somewhere outside the United States claims to have high-level access to as many as 400 unclassified government and military computer systems, and also claims to be the tutor of the two California teenagers implicated in recent attacks against federal networks. An expert on US military computer vulnerabilities said claims made by the hacker, who goes by the name Analyzer, are plausible.
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"[Defense Department Web servers are vulnerable] enough for me to get access to one system," Analyzer said. "From there, I get the rest." The hacker communicated with Wired News in a 90-minute interview Tuesday night over Internet Relay Chat - a global network of real-time chat servers. He said that he has been concerned that the FBI, in rousting two Northern California teenagers, is targeting the wrong people. "I just don't want them to hang the wrong person," said Analyzer, who characterized the two youths as his "students" and said they were merely working from one of his site password lists.

42. Government Executive Magazine - 4/15/02 OMB Releases Defense Department Outsourc
April 15, 2002 OMB releases defense department outsourcing list. By Jason Peckenpaughjpeckenpaugh@govexec.com. defense department fiscal 2001 FAIR Act inventory.
http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/0402/041502p2.htm
Free E-mail Newsletter About Us Contact Us Index ... Search Daily Briefing April 15, 2002 OMB releases Defense Department outsourcing list By Jason Peckenpaugh
jpeckenpaugh@govexec.com

More than 240,000 Defense Department jobs are eligible for outsourcing under the 1998 Federal Activities Inventory Reform (FAIR) Act, according to the agency’s latest inventory of commercial jobs released Monday. Defense was the sole agency in the fourth and final round of fiscal 2001 FAIR Act lists to be published in the Federal Register by the Office of Management and Budget. The inventory showed that Defense had 412,756 commercial jobs at the beginning of fiscal 2001. Of those, 241,332 could be performed in the private sector. Defense used various exemptions to protect the remaining 171,424 jobs on the list from possible outsourcing. The release puts an end to OMB’s review of agency FAIR Act lists for fiscal 2001. In all, OMB signed off on the lists for 109 agencies, which contained well over 1 million commercial jobs. The release of the Defense Department’s list was held up by controversy surrounding the Pentagon’s participation in the Bush administration’s competitive sourcing initiative.

43. Defense Department To Put $4 Billion Into UAVs
03/19/03 defense department to put $4 billion into UAVs By Joab Jackson Staff WriterThe defense department plans to spend up to $4 billion between now and
http://www.washingtontechnology.com/news/1_1/daily_news/20319-1.html
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Defense Department to put $4 billion into UAVs
By Joab Jackson
Staff Writer
The Defense Department plans to spend up to $4 billion between now and 2010 to develop and build unmanned aerial vehicles, the agency announced today.
The remotely piloted aircraft will be used for surveillance, reconnaissance and air strike capabilities, Defense Department documents . The plans detail the Defense Department's development of UAVs over the next 25 years. "The potential value UAVs offer range across virtually every mission area and capability of interest to DoD," said Dyke Weatherington, deputy of the UAV planning task force at the Defense Department. "When we remove the human from the vehicle, we open up a range of possibilities that was never possible when we had humans on board." Today, about 90 UAVs are in use by the military, not including small-scale systems used in niche applications, Weatherington said. The Defense Department expects to have 350 UAVs by 2010. There are eight types of UAVs in use, Weatherington said. The Air Force's Predator and Global Hawk models have been deployed in Afghanistan, mostly for reconnaissance, although some of the Predators have been retrofitted with Hellfire missiles. A Predator-fired Hellfire was used to kill one of al Qaeda's top lieutenants in Afghanistan, according to the Defense Department.

44. Defense Department Retools For A Net-Centric Future
•, defense department Retools for a NetCentric Future, •, Need for Speed,
http://www.washingtontechnology.com/news/16_5/features/16635-1.html
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Top 100 Federal ... Free E-letters Defense Department Retools for a Net-Centric Future Need for Speed Next Printer-Friendly Version E-Mail This Article ; Vol. 16 No. 5
Defense Department Retools for a Net-Centric Future
By James Schultz
Defense Department Retools for a Net-Centric Future
Once, when warfighters had only to arm, assemble and attack, the strongest triumphed. Now battle supremacy rests with the computer-enabled.
For the Defense Department, information technology is providing the mission-critical dexterity essential for gathering intelligence, coordinating the movement of supplies, troops and weapons and ultimately prevailing in conflicts large or small. Where force-support IT leaves off and battle-ready IT begins, however, is increasingly difficult to pinpoint. Information technology is now so pervasive throughout the armed forces, some of the same techniques used to automate supply-chain management can be adapted to coordinate and monitor operational theaters or yoke together an array of high-tech combat hardware. According to Ray Bjorklund, vice president of consulting services for Federal Sources Inc., a McLean, Va., firm that specializes in public-sector information-technology market research, IT-related Defense Department investment is significantly more than the official projection of $21.5 billion for fiscal 2002.

45. SGI - Newsroom: U.S. Army Supercomputer Center First Defense Department Site To
US Army Supercomputer Center First defense department Siteto Install 512Processor SGI Origin 3000 Series Server.
http://www.sgi.com/newsroom/press_releases/2001/april/army.html
Newsroom Press Release Archive Contact PR Related Sites SGI 2000 Series U.S. Army Supercomputer Center First Defense Department Site to Install 512-Processor SGI Origin 3000 Series Server TM TM , the unique modular approach to supercomputing from SGI, allows customers such as the ERDC MSRC to efficiently build and scale a 512-processor single-system image using the industry's only third-generation NUMA architecture. "SGI NUMAflex is truly a snap-together server system concept," said Anthony Robbins, president, SGI Federal. "The proof is that this past weekend a team of system engineers and technicians at ERDC MSRC completely reconfigured two 256-processor SGI Origin 3800 systems into a single 512-processor SGI Origin 3800 machine. By Monday morning, the system was completely recabled, powered up and running code." "We selected the SGI Origin 3000 series of next-generation, highly flexible and scalable servers because the SGI NUMA architecture is the most scalable NUMA shared-memory architecture available today," said Bradley Comes, director, ERDC MSRC. "DoD, government and academic researchers will now be able to conduct leading-edge research powered by this massively parallel, high-performance SGI system." The ERDC MSRC specializes in five DoD-designated computational technology areas, including computational structural mechanics, computational fluid dynamics, climate/weather/ocean modeling and simulation, forces modeling and simulation and environmental quality modeling and simulation.

46. COMMERCE GIVEN DEFENSE DEPARTMENT GRANT TO CONTINUE MILITARY LAND USE STUDIES
Commerce Given defense department Grant To Continue Military Land UseStudies. The Community Planning Division in the Arizona Department
http://www.commerce.state.az.us/webapps/press/current_release.asp?sID=192

47. Wired News: AntiOnline Founder Under Fire
A defense department contractor emailed the founder of a computer security news and information Web site, warning him that he may be culpable for promoting the hacking of government networks. Wired News
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,12084,00.html
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03:00 PM May. 04, 1998 PT The founder of a computer-security Web site who published details of recent hacker penetrations into government systems has been warned by a Defense Department contractor that he may be considered an accessory to the crimes. John Vranesevich, founder of full-disclosure computer security Web site AntiOnline , posted two emails that he and other AntiOnline members received last week from a contractor with the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA). The emails, sent by a system administrator at the Denver Defense Megacenter a financial administration center run by DISA suggested that Vranesevich "had knowledge of a crime and may be culpable."
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In recent weeks, AntiOnline has reported several penetrations of DISA systems by crackers, and included screen shots of government programs and sign-on screens as proof of the intrusions.

48. Defense Department Guards Against 'Code Red' Worm
defense department Guards Against 'Code Red' Worm
http://www.newsfactor.com/perl/story/12238.html
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By Robyn Weisman
NewsFactor Network
July 24, 2001
Taking action to head off the possible spread of the 'Code Red' worm that targeted the White House, the Defense Department has made its public Web sites off limits for now.
In This Story:

Code Red Alert

'So What?'

Cyber Pearl Harbor
Related Stories The U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) disclosed to news sources Monday that it has restricted general access to a majority of its Web sites in order to secure them against the "Code Red" worm, the same virus that unsuccessfully targeted White House computers last week. Pentagon spokesperson Lt. Col. Catherine Abbott said that until the Code Red worm no longer poses any threats to DoD networks, most of the agency's sites will remain off-limits to the public. In addition, said Abbott, the DoD has ordered its auxiliary agencies to "review the status of their Internet information servers to ensure that the appropriate patches were previously installed [in order] to protect DoD Web sites from being compromised." Abbott added that Pentagon technicians are figuring out where systems vulnerabilities may exist within many of the DoD's approximately 10,000 separate networks and what sort of patches or work-arounds will be needed to protect areas that may be vulnerable to attack.

49. 700 Defense Department Teachers
Bureau of Administration. Office of Allowances. Standardized Regulations(DSSR). 700 defense department Teachers. 700 defense department Teachers.
http://www.state.gov/m/a/als/c1861.htm
Bureau of Administration Office of Allowances Standardized Regulations (DSSR) 700 Defense Department Teachers
700 Defense Department Teachers
710 General
720 Allowances - Special Rules

This site is managed by the Bureau of Public Affairs, U.S. Department of State.
External links to other Internet sites should not be construed as an endorsement of the views contained therein.

50. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Archive. Department of Defense 1994. Mission Statement. In addition, thereare about 1.1 million civilian employees in the defense department.
http://govinfo.library.unt.edu/npr/library/status/mission/mdod.htm
Archive
Department of Defense
Mission Statement
The Department of Defense is responsible for providing the military forces needed to deter war and protect the security of our country. The major elements of these forces are the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force, consisting of about 1.7 million men and women on active duty. Of these, some 518,000 including about 67,000 on ships at sea are serving outside the United States. They are backed, in case of emergency, by the 1,000,000 members of the reserve components. In addition, there are about 1.1 million civilian employees in the Defense Department. Under the President, who is also Commander in Chief, the Secretary of Defense exercises authority, direction, and control over the Department, which includes the separately organized military departments of Army, Navy, and Air Force, the Joint Chiefs of Staff providing military advice, the unified and specified combatant commands, and various defense agencies established for specific purposes. Every State in the Union has some defense activities. Central headquarters of the Department is at the Pentagon, the ``world's largest office building.''

51. Defense Department Ahead Of The Game
defense department ahead of the game. BY Sara Michael March 10, 2003,Printing? Use this version. Email this to a friend. RELATED LINKS.
http://www.fcw.com/fcw/articles/2003/0310/mgt-program2-03-10-03.asp
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Main story: " Get with the program
While some agencies are scrambling to implement training for information technology project and program management, the Defense Department tackled the problem years ago. For more than a decade, the department has been educating IT management employees through the Defense Acquisition University and the Information Resources Management College. The courses have changed over time, but the training continues to be rigorous and mandatory for managers. "We're a lot ahead of the game," said Joyce France, acting division director for planning and outreach for DOD's deputy chief information officer. "The civilian agencies are just getting revved up to look at that." The complexity of the systems in the department generated the need for such training. Program managers must have completed a program management course and have at least eight years of acquisition experience to manage a major program. "We've been into this longer than the civilian agencies because of the complexity of the systems within the Department of Defense," France said. "If you're not certified, you cannot be evaluated to serve in a position defined as a project or program manager."

52. Where Some The Defense Department’s Top Systems Projects Stand
August 20, 2001; Vol. 20 No. 24 Where some the defense department’s top systemsprojects stand Defense Information Systems Agency. Defense Message System.
http://216.70.54.91/20_24/news/16880-1.html

53. STINET - Department Of Defense Index Of Specifications And Standards (DODISS) Fi
Similar pages Moïse's Bibliography defense departmentdefense department Publications. Department of Defense Annual Report. D 1.1 The Departmentof Defense, 19441978 Documents on Establishment and Organization.
http://stinet.dtic.mil/str/dodiss4_fields.html
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The DoD Index Of Specifications and Standards (DoDISS) is currently unavailable. Meanwhile, you will be automatically transferred to the Defense Automated Printing Service (DAPS) Quick Search Database for your specifications and standards needs. We regret any inconvenience this may cause. You will be automatically transferred in a few seconds...
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54. Defense Department, Firms Reach Wi-Fi Pact
The club welcomes members worldwide. For membership information, clickhere. defense department, firms reach WiFi pact IWCE/MRT, Feb 6 2003.
http://iwce-mrt.com/ar/radio_defense_department_firms/
Industry Home IWCE Mobile Radio Technology Register/Subscribe ... Contact Us INDUSTRY NEWS Public Safety Communications Homeland Security Dealers IWCE Attend Exhibit Speak Advertise MRT MAGAZINE Current Issue Advertise SUBSCRIBE/REGISTER Free Product Information MRT Magazine E-Newsletters IWCE Show INDUSTRY RESOURCES Industry Associations Industry Products Related Websites Related Publications IWCE — Mobile Radio Technology Special Reports 800 MHz Interference to Public Safety 9-11-01: A Special Report 220MHz: An MRT Special Report Wireless Radio Franchise IWCE — Mobile Radio Technology Special Focus Radio Club of America The first radio communications society, the Radio Club of America, was founded in 1909 in New York. The club welcomes members worldwide. For membership information, click here Defense Department, firms reach Wi-Fi pact
IWCE/MRT, Feb 6 2003
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Tech companies and the Department of Defense announced a compromise Friday on the future of wireless networking, addressing military concerns about radar interference in the 5 GHz band. The two sides said Friday that they had reached a resolution that establishes a new radio frequency threshold for products using unlicensed radio spectrum primarily Wi-Fi products.
The Department of Defense worried that the cumulative effect of Wi-Fi products could interfere with the military's use of radar because the regions of the spectrum in which Wi-Fi and radar operate overlap. The new resolution encourages the use of the 5GHz band in the United States and internationally. The use of this band is likely to be a significant topic at the upcoming World Radiocommunication Conference in June in Geneva.

55. Toward A Reform Of The Defense Department Software Acquisition Policy
Toward a Reform of the defense department Software Acquisition Policy.Technical Report. Samuelson, P. A series of about 120 interviews
http://www.sei.cmu.edu/publications/documents/86.reports/86.tr.001.html
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Toward a Reform of the Defense Department Software Acquisition Policy
Technical Report Samuelson, P. A series of about 120 interviews were conducted with DoD personnel and others recommended by them. This report is an organized catalog of software acquisition problems reported, along with some assessments of their seriousness.
CMU/SEI-86-TR-001 Download the PDF File
The Software Engineering Institute (SEI) is a federally funded research and development center sponsored by the U.S. Department of Defense and operated by Carnegie Mellon University. by Carnegie Mellon University
URL: http://www.sei.cmu.edu/publications/documents/86.reports/86.tr.001.html
Last Modified: 13 March 2003

56. ADL COMMENDS DEFENSE DEPARTMENT'S ACTION ON EXTREMIST ACTIVITY IN THE MILITARY
Press Release, Hate Crimes. ADL COMMENDS defense department'S ACTIONON EXTREMIST ACTIVITY IN THE MILITARY New York, NY, February
http://www.adl.org/presrele/HatCr_51/2663_51.asp
Home Law Enforcement Search About ... Contact Press Release Categories Anti-Semitism: USA Anti-Semitism: International Black-Jewish Relations Christian-Jewish Relations ... Miscellaneous Resources Press Releases Militia Watchdog Archives Legislative Action Center Regional Offices ... Security for Community Press Release Hate Crimes ADL COMMENDS DEFENSE DEPARTMENT'S ACTION ON EXTREMIST ACTIVITY IN THE MILITARY New York, NY, February 12, 1996...The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) today commended action taken by the Department of Defense aimed at eliminating the participation of military personnel in extremist group activity. Following the allegedly racially-motivated murders of two African Americans by soldiers from Fort Bragg near Fayetteville, NC, Abraham H. Foxman, ADL National Director, urged Defense Secretary William Perry to implement measures to address the problem of extremist activity by military personnel. Citing reports that one of the soldiers openly displayed a swastika flag in his barracks and wore Skinhead garb, Mr. Foxman questioned the efficacy and clarity of Department guidelines that failed to call for an investigation into such "signals of hate activity." In a letter to Mr. Foxman, William E. Leftwich III, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense, said, "following the Fayetteville incident, we developed prevention strategies through consultation with former DOD officials and outside authorities, and Secretary Perry issued a statement publicly re-emphasizing DOD policy on active participation in supremacist groups."

57. Edwin Moïse Bibliography: Defense Department
defense department. Department of Defense Annual Report. D 1.1 The Departmentof Defense, 19441978 Documents on Establishment and Organization.
http://www.vwip.org/mb/defense.htm
Defense Department Department of Defense Annual Report
D 1.1: The Department of Defense, 1944-1978: Documents on Establishment and Organization . Office of the Secretary of Defense, Historical Office, 1978.
D 1.2:Es8/944-78 Steven L. Rearden, History of the Office of the Secretary of Defense , vol. 1, The Formative Years: 1947-1950 . xi, 667 pp. This initial volume contains little about Indochina.
D 1.2:H 62/3/v.1 Doris M. Condit, History of the Office of the Secretary of Defense , vol. 2, The Test of War, 1950-1953 . xiv, 701 pp. There is a 17-page chapter on Indochina.
D 1.2:H 62/3/v.2 History of the Joint Chiefs of Staff , vol. 5: The Joint Chiefs of Staff and National Policy, 1953-1954
D 5.2:H 62/v.5 Robert J. Watson, History of the Joint Chiefs of Staff , vol. 4, Into the Missile Age, 1956-1960 . xiii, 1024 pp. A moderate amount of Vietnam-related material.
D 1.2:H 62/3/v.4 Speeches and Statements by Admiral Thomas H. Moorer, United States Navy, as Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff, 2 July 1970 - 2 July 1974
D 5.18:M 78

58. Defense Department Report, June 3: Rumsfeld Trip To India, Pakistan
defense department REPORT, JUNE 3 RUMSFELD TRIP TO INDIA, PAKISTAN.
http://usembassy.state.gov/islamabad/wwwhindopak02060302.html
DEFENSE DEPARTMENT REPORT, JUNE 3: RUMSFELD TRIP TO INDIA, PAKISTAN Indo-Pak Tension
Home Page
(Trip is part of mission to NATO and three Persian Gulf states)
June 3, 2002
U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld will leave June 4 to attend the NATO defense ministers' meetings in Brussels, visit three Persian Gulf states, and meet officials in India and Pakistan, senior defense
officials say.
The stops in India and Pakistan are at the request of President Bush, who is using two high-level diplomatic visits there this week (June 3-7) to ease rising tensions between the two South Asian nuclear powers over the disputed Kashmir region, the officials said. Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage will precede Rumsfeld to India and Pakistan.
The senior defense officials, who spoke on background at a special
Pentagon briefing June 3, would not discuss any specific aspects of
Rumsfeld's mission to India and Pakistan, though they expect his visit to be brief.

59. Web Hosting Industry News | Red Hat Certified By Defense Department
Red Hat Certified by defense department. February 12, 2003 (WEBHOST INDUSTRY REVIEW) Open source and Linux provider Red Hat
http://thewhir.com/marketwatch/rha021203.cfm

Web Hosts:
Shared Dedicated Managed ... WEB HOSTING NEWSMAGAZINE
Red Hat Certified by Defense Department February 12, 2003 (WEB HOST INDUSTRY REVIEW) Open source and Linux provider Red Hat Inc ( RedHat.com ) announced on Tuesday, at the E-Gov event in Washington DC, that its Red Hat Linux Advanced Server is the first Linux platform to achieve the Department of Defense's Defense Information Systms Agency Common Operating Environment (COE)certification. COE is a DoD software security and interoperability specification, broadly recognized as a critical computing standard within the U.S. government. Red Hat Linux Advanced Server achieved the certification while running on IBM eServer xSeries 330. Red Hat CTO Michael Tiemann delivered a keynote at the E-Gov Web Enabled Government Conference, explaining the importance of architecture in government IT infrastructure and why COE compliance for Linux is a good example of a supportable open source technology foundation. "The fact that Red Hat was able to achieve COE compliance for Red Hat Linux Advanced Server expels yet another myth about the enterprise readiness of open source software," said Tiemann "Red Hat Linux Advanced Server is a trusted platform for enterprise infrastructure and will now offer the same values to the government. The COE Program's inclusion of LSB aligns with the platform standards accepted by the Linux community. This is also yet another demonstration of how Red Hat's open source solution put the theory of open standards into practice."

60. Techweb Today
defense department Enlists Netscape For Multiyear Deal (10/08/97; 510pm EDT) By Malcolm Maclachlan, TechWire. MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.
http://www.techweb.com/wire/news/1997/10/1008dod.html

Identity Management
LANs Network Security Desktop Applications ... Application Traffic Management Choose site ... TechWeb (All Sites) TechWeb Features InformationWeek InternetWeek Network Computing Optimize The Open Enterprise Government Enterprise advanced Free Newsletters TechEncyclopedia TechCalendar ... Contact Us TechWeb Network: InformationWeek InternetWeek Network Computing Network Magazine ... Transform
(10/08/97; 5:10 p.m. EDT)
By Malcolm Maclachlan TechWire "You don't hear a lot about the Department of Defense because a lot of what they do is behind the firewall, you might say," Menkart said. "Other organizations are competing actively to work for the federal government." The DOD has a lot of data on legacy systems and is working to move it to areas in which Web-based interfaces can be used. For instance, the agency is in the midst of converting its Global Command and Control System which holds information on troop movements and combat readiness to take advantage of technology that can use such an interface, Menkart said. Search Archives
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