Secretary of the US Navy, the Honorable Carlos Del Toro, provided the first of Tuesday’s Keynote Speeches at AOC 2023, providing an excellent overview of the Navy’s EMSO initiatives and achievements.
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Noah Wilchaz Noah is an embedded software engineer at Northrop Grumman Mission Systems in Amherst, NY. He joined the company…
RDML Stephen Donald, USN, Deputy Commander, Joint Force Headquarters-Cyber (Navy) 10th Fleet, spoke at AOC 2023 about his organization’s responsibilities and his talk focused on the three pillars of the 10th Fleet: assured command and control (C2), battlespace awareness and cyber and space effects.
Brittany Joy Today’s Future 5 profile spotlights Brittany Joy, a Senior Staff RF and Analog Design Engineer at Motorola Solutions…
Michael DiMeo Each year, AOC recognizes five young professionals as the year’s “Future 5” – individuals who actively innovate and…
Since pretty much the beginning of the electronics revolution, all the military Services have struggled mightily to keep up with the pace of technology advancement and a constantly evolving enemy threat.
The December issue of JED is available online in full for a limited time. If you’d like to access full issues of JED at any time, including our extensive archive, log in at crows.org or become an AOC member today.
Not too long ago, some very enterprising people asked themselves a question: If almost anyone can access spacecraft-delivered, high-quality images, and accurate geolocation of most places on Earth for a fee, why not add RF signals to the mix? The answer, as it turns out, is that this is not just an interesting idea but a potentially lucrative market.
Space is without question a critical operational domain for US military forces and one in which superior military capabilities and operational dominance must be assured.
Electronic warfare (EW) – as both a science and a military art – has been an ever-present consideration for the NATO alliance in the 72 years since its establishment.