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Military & Aerospace Electronics
February 2009
Courtney E. Howard
Raytheon moves ahead with upgrades to Navy's Ship Self-Defense System U.S. Navy officials awarded Raytheon Co. in Tewksbury, Mass., a $23 million contract to serve as the platform systems engineering agent for the Ship Self-Defense System. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
March 2006
Ed Walsh
The Next Step for Shipboard Electronics Growth of the U.S. Navy's fleet of surface warships and submarines is riding on systems innovation and new technologies to introduce open-systems solutions for network-centric warfare, ballistic-missile defense, and other capabilities for the 21st century maritime warfare. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
March 2007
Edward J. Walsh
Shipboard Electronics Tune up for Future Conflicts Navy pushes smart engineering and open-systems architectures for the shipboard electronics and electro-optics aboard the nation's combat fleet. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
March 2008
Edward J. Walsh
Navy Advances Surface-Ship Technologies Program managers go all-out on open systems and COTS to upgrade existing destroyers, cruisers, and other surface warships, while looking ahead to new destroyer and cruiser electronics and electro-optics technologies. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
March 2005
Ed Walsh
Navy looks to technology to balance budget cuts Transformational plans for the seagoing service call for vast levels of wired and wireless networking of ships, submarines, aircraft, weapons, communications systems, RF antennas, and more, to offset planned cutbacks in new platform development. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
March 2009
Edward J. Walsh
Navy steps out on MODERNIZATION Top Navy leaders are struggling to balance the right kind of ships, the best number of platforms, and the best mix of electronic and electro-optic technologies to meet the changing worldwide threats of the 21st century. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
January 2007
Raytheon Chooses RTI Real-Time Software Middleware for Zumwalt-Class Destroyer The RTI Data Distribution Service delivers real-time data distribution over a shipboard network. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
April 2006
Grace Jean
Surface Combatants Dominate Future Fleet The Navy plans to build a total of 88 surface combatants composed of 26 next-generation destroyers and cruisers and 62 Arleigh-Burke ships. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
June 2009
Edward J. Walsh
Warship radar technology designers set sights on next-generation Navy cruiser The companies are stressing compliance with Navy "open-architecture" mandates, technology risk reduction, and the need to meet new airborne and missile threats. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
March 2010
Edward J. Walsh
Navy on the verge of major shipboard electronics breakthroughs Open-architecture and COTS technologies are critical for advances in ship propulsion, navigation and guidance, weapons control, ballistic missile defense, modular mission packages, and related systems for the nation's maritime defense. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
May 2009
Lockheed Martin looks to LynxOS for MEADS missile system MEADS protects maneuvering ground combat forces and provides homeland defense against tactical ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, unmanned aerial vehicles, and aircraft. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
August 2004
Ben Ames
Teams Build Competing Command-and-Control Systems for Littoral Combat Ships Navy planners are asking for two different prototypes of Littoral Combat Ship (LCS), the multimission warship designed to cruise shallow waters close to shore. Neither will use Aegis. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
April 2005
Ben Ames
POSIX: reveling in its popularity Looking to save money and reuse software, Pentagon planners are turning to POSIX. If all real-time operating systems work with POSIX, then soldiers can swap code from a broken computer to a new one. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
December 2005
Grace Jean
Navy Must Close Budget Gap To Build Future Fleet Amid budget constraints and rising shipbuilding costs, the Navy faces a significant challenge in building its future force, according to naval analysts. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
September 2004
Is your RTOS safe and secure? Vendors of real-time operating systems find themselves being pulled in two directions at once. Defense contractor customers demand lower costs while, at the same, time more security and safety certification than ever before. Linux is a point of heated discussion. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
August 2007
Sandra I. Erwin
Inefficient Shipbuilding Jeopardizes Navy's Expansion Goals The Navy owns 277 ships, but somehow manages to keep 551 different engines in its inventory. Such inefficients partly explain why the cost of buying and maintaining ships has spiraled out of control. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
March 2012
Eric Beidel
Navy Leaders Want a More Flexible Fleet After fighting two land wars for a decade, the military is putting an emphasis back on the sea and is shifting its focus to the Asia-Pacific region and to a more maritime-weighted mission in the Middle East. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
March 2015
Valerie Insinna
'Distributed Lethality' Concept Boosts Navy's Need For New Weaponry A new concept called "distributed lethality," describes how legacy vessels would be packed with off-the-shelf weapons and sensors that make them more deadly and survivable. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
September 2006
Northrop Grumman Awards Raytheon $218 Million Subcontracts Raytheon will provide the electronic systems and integration for the next three ships in the LPD 17 class. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
November 2008
John Keller
Joining sensors through data fusion Data experts are are relying on various approaches to refine sensor outputs into useful information, and essentially create a whole sensor picture that is greater than the sum of its parts. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
November 2009
John Keller
Multi-Sensor Fusion Hits the Mainstream Once considered as futuristic, difficult, and elusive, multi-sensor fusion is coming into its own as a standard approach of processing signals from a wide variety of sensors, and making sense of incomplete and sketchy sensor data. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
March 2008
Concurrent Delivers Redhawk Linux for U.S. Navy Aegis Weapon System Concurrent Computer to provide the U.S. Navy with a real-time operating system, and related software and hardware, to support the Navy Cruiser Modernization COTS Refresh 2 program. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
May 2007
Raytheon Chooses RTI Real-Time Middleware for U.S. Navy Destroyer Program The RTI Data Distribution Service combines with Raytheon's Total Ship Computing Environment Infrastructure (TSCEI) Release 4.0 to deliver reliable, real-time data distribution throughout the entire shipboard network. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
November 2007
Sandra I. Erwin
Technology Spending Will Target Current and Future Navy Fleet The Navy should direct its future science, research and technology spending to both improving the current fleet and designing next-generation systems, officials say. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
January 2008
Grace V. Jean
Ship Construction Costs Endanger Navy's Fleet Expansion With runaway shipbuilding costs, disruptions in key programs and competing budgetary needs, the Navy is heading into one of its toughest procurement cycles yet. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
June 2009
John Keller
Military laser weapon research aims at defending U.S. Navy ships at sea U.S. Navy researchers are asking two U.S. defense contractors to develop military laser prototypes of a future laser weapon of megawatt power to defend warships at sea from future maritime threats. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
May 2008
John McHale
Key Tactical Data Link Systems Clear Operational Testing U.S. Navy experts are moving ahead with an upgrade to the Tactical Data Link (TDL) system onboard Navy ships after testing the data link earlier this year. The TDL will transfer information quickly and securely among military assets. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
December 2006
Raytheon Selects PrismTech Real-Time Java Middleware for Navy Destroyer Program Managers at Raytheon, the prime mission systems equipment integrator for the U.S. Navy's DDG 1000 Zumwalt-class destroyer program, sought a commercial off-the-shelf middleware solution for the future warship. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
February 2009
Grace V. Jean
Navy's Shipbuilding Strategy Remains Under Fire A fleet of 278 ships today -- less than half of what it was two decades ago -- is likely to continue to shrink unless the Navy can contain the soaring costs of building new ships. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
August 2010
Grace V. Jean
Navy Aiming for Laser Weapons at Sea The Navy expects to incorporate lasers onto most ship classes in its surface fleet, including amphibious ships, cruisers and destroyers. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
January 2010
John Keller
Navy Looks to Software-Defined Radio to Supplement or Replace Satellite Communications Raytheon engineers will investigate new modular, software-defined digital radio architectures to improve data link performance with high-throughput waveforms in all frequency bands. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
April 2007
John Keller
Developers of Real-Time Embedded Software Take Aim at Code Complexity Safety, security, reliability, and performance dominate the discussion of real-time embedded operating systems as software developers aim for multiprocessor architectures with smaller size, lighter weight, and lower power consumption. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
December 2004
Sandra I. Erwin
Sailors Move From Classrooms To Shipboard Simulators The U.S. Navy will be plowing millions of dollars into new simulators that will be used aboard ships, rather than ashore, to help sailors acquire specialized skills before they depart on a mission mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
December 2003
Sandra I. Erwin
Littoral Combat Ship Sensors Pose Integration Challenges The LCS is a new warship being designed specifically for coastal operations, in particular anti-submarine warfare, maritime patrol, and mine detection and clearance. It must be integrated with a dispersed force of smaller networked platforms with distributed unmanned sensors. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
March 2006
Sandra I. Erwin
Navy Seeks to Avert Precipitous Decline in the Size of the Fleet An ambitious Navy plan to expand the size of the fleet not only assumes a considerable surge in spending, but also a fundamental shift in the preparation and execution of ship programs, senior officials say. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
February 2008
Grace V. Jean
More Amphibious Ships Are Needed, Marines Contend Marine Corps leaders have stepped up pressure on the Navy to increase the size of the amphibious vessel fleet. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
January 2015
Ben Freeman
Canceling the DDG-1000 Destroyer Program Was a Mistake The U.S. Navy's DDG-1000 Zumwalt-class destroyers are extraordinarily expensive, but ending the Zumwalt program in favor of buying upgraded versions of the decades-old Arleigh-Burke DDG-51 destroyers limits the Navy's capabilities without significantly reducing costs mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
April 2013
Stew Magnuson
When It Comes to the Navy's Destroyers, It's a Numbers Game Providing the coverage the Navy believes it needs to patrol the world's oceans is being made more complicated by a chronic shortage of destroyers, analysts have said. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
July 2004
Roxana Tiron
Lack of Specificity in Navy Shipbuilding Plans Irks the Industry Frustrated by perpetual fluctuations in U.S. Navy shipbuilding budgets, industry leaders are asking for funding stability. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
June 2004
J.R. Wilson
Ballistic Missile Defense Looks to the Future Command centers that will help guide ballistic missile defense efforts are providing opportunities for a wide variety of commercial off-the-shelf computers, displays, and high-speed networking. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
January 2007
Sandra I. Erwin
Shipbuilding Plan Sailing Into Turbulent Seas Cutbacks in personnel, training and maintenance costs will fuel a moderate growth in Navy procurement programs starting in 2008, albeit at a slower pace than Navy leaders had forecast a year ago, analysts estimate. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
July 2006
LynuxWorks LynxOS-178 to Control F-35 Joint Strike Fighter Panoramic Cockpit Display Avionics designers at L-3 Communications needed a safety-critical real-time operating system for a portion of the Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighter aircraft. They found their solution in the LynxOS-178 DO-178B-certifiable ARINC-653 and POSIX-conformant RTOS from LynuxWorks. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
October 2005
Ben Ames
Digital receivers power a new generation of electronic warfare Military technology designers have shifted from analog to digital radar receivers to deal with decentralized threats. The change is a major improvement for size, weight, and power. mark for My Articles similar articles
Popular Mechanics
August 28, 2008
Joe Pappalardo
5 Reasons the U.S. Navy's Scared (and What They're Doing About It) It's a well-known rule of thumb in military circles: protection from the things that scare the Pentagon receive R&D money. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
April 2015
Valerie Insinna
Questions Remain About Navy's Modified Littoral Combat Ship Instead of cutting down the program of record, the service will procure the full 52-ship buy, and the last 20 ships will be outfitted with beefed up weapons, sensors and armor, Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Jonathan Greenert announced in December. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
April 2014
Stew Magnuson
China's Navy Takes Great Leap Forward China's navy is growing, analysts said. And it's not only the number of ships increasing. Modernization of its fleets is going hand in hand with new types of vessels including the stated goal of building indigenous aircraft carriers. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
April 2014
Valerie Insinna
Littoral Combat Ship Faces Uncertain Future On Feb. 24, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel confirmed rumors that had been swirling around the littoral combat ship program for months -- instead of going forward with its planned 52 ship buy, purchases would be limited to 32. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military & Aerospace Electronics
May 2005
In Brief BAE Systems protects U.S. Army and Navy helicopters... Northrop Grumman to expand Mississippi UAV facility ... Thales forms alliance partnership with Wind River... Lockheed Martin delivers first Atlas Five Booster to west coast launch site... DC-DC device market continues to grow... etc. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
January 2007
Grace Jean
China's Defense Build-up Merits Closer Attention From Navy, Say Analysts China has been beefing up its military might, and the rapid growth of its navy, in particular, is creating disagreements in the Defense Department over whether such a build-up ought to be perceived as a threat to U.S. interests in the Pacific. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
July 2004
Roxana Tiron
Navy Gradually Embracing Composite Materials in Ships The Navy claims that its next generation destroyer, the DD(X), will be the service's first major commitment to composite construction. mark for My Articles similar articles