Author: Mary-Louise Hoffman|| Date Published: May 31, 2022
BAE Systems, CACI International and Peraton have received separate contracts from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to develop approaches that would facilitate interoperability between heterogeneous tactical networks and allow military personnel to connect on demand.
CACI’s industry partners on the project are Nokia Bell Labs, Network Centric Solutions and Phoel Technology Solutions.
Meanwhile, BAE will collaborate with AIMdyn, Apogee Research, RAM Laboratories, and The Regents of the University of California.
The teammates of Peraton are Charles River Analytics, Scientific Systems and the University of Memphis.
MINC program participants will aim to create a network overlay with an always-on connection, a cross-network method to manage configuration and data flow and a mission-based approach to determine critical flows of information intended for warfighting services.
The agency expects contractors to produce an integrated platform for testing in a military laboratory environment and those who complete the initial phase to demonstrate their products through a live, virtual and constructive setting in the second stage.
Phase three of the program will involve development, operational and security tasks, DARPA added.
Textron Aviation Defense has been awarded a five-year, $150 million contract to provide sustaining engineering and program management, or SEPM, services…
Merlin, an aerospace and defense technology company, has appointed former PsiQuantum executive Mark Brunner as chief revenue officer. What Will Mark Brunner Oversee?…
Fortreum has acquired Kovr.AI, an AI-native cybersecurity compliance platform, to combine automated compliance capabilities with independent assessment services for federal…