TITAN is a thing of great strength, intellect, and importance: For the Army, it’s all that for JADC2
A tactical ground station that finds and tracks threats to support long-range precision targeting, TITAN promises to bring together data from ground, air, and space sensors.
By Breaking DefenseRI&S uses experimental platform to test JADC2 concepts during Valiant Shield 22
By Raytheon Intelligence & SpaceThe future of multi-domain operation will, in part, be written by unmanned systems operating at the tactical edge, either individually or as part of a swarm, with interoperability for both manned-unmanned and unmanned-unmanned teaming operations.
By Breaking DefenseData has been, arguably, the US military’s most valuable-but-untapped resource since the founding of the US Army in 1787 and the US Navy a decade later.
By Breaking DefenseC2 will be particularly important in scenarios where US forces are met with anti-access/area denial countermeasures potentially more suitable for autonomous aerial and ground systems.
By Barry RosenbergThe “right solutions” for future conflict must have multi-domain capabilities and be intelligent and interoperable to communicate and transfer data between systems.
By Breaking DefenseIn this brief Zoomcast with Ross Niebergall, vice president and chief technology officer for L3Harris, we discuss how JADC2 is evolving.
By Breaking DefenseWhat the US Navy is doing now to electrify, why it’s vital to the Great Power competition, and advances in batteries and energy storage.
By Breaking DefenseLearn about the new ideas and activities that are going on now to upgrade and pay for the next generation of SATCOM.
By Breaking DefenseHeavy lift modernization to help enable all-domain operations needs to progress.
By Breaking DefenseWith the Army focused on FLRAA and FARA, the question of heavy lift under the Future Vertical Lift program won’t be answered for a decade or more. In the meantime, here’s what the Army is thinking.
By Barry RosenbergThe US Navy answers questions about its roadmap for employing electric and battery power for lasers, radars, and propulsion over the next two decades.
By Barry RosenbergDoD Satcom Chief Mike Dean discusses how new, disruptive capabilities for SATCOM in LEO, MEO, and GEO are creating novel mission sets for all-domain operations and new ways of paying for it. He also provides a status report on developing enterprise SATCOM command and control.
By Barry Rosenberg