The U.S. Army is testing blimps for detecting, tracking, and shooting down cruise missiles; the radar-equipped aerostats are tethered balloons resembling blimps
Soteria -- a consortium bidding for a U.K. search and rescue helicopter contract -- has selected the Sikorsky S-92 as its preferred mission aircraft
First meeting of users group brings together core users of Situator to share best practices, ideas for product development
Aerovironment wins more money to develop its Nano Air Vehicle; the tiny, insect-size robot, flies and hovers using flapping wings like a hummingbird
Researchers developed rat-like robot which can crawl through -- and under -- rubble in search for victims trapped under collapsed buildings; robot uses long plastic whiskers at the side of its head to detect objects and radio back to a control center
Researchers from several European institutions unite in creating the largest quantum key distribution network ever built; a big step toward practical implementation of quantum encryption
Groups representing the U.K. high-tech sector say the government's plans to cut funding for major weapons systems would cut 2 to 3 percent out of the U.K.'s engineering and skill base
The United States and Spain have formalized a program that identifies high-risk travelers Airport before they can board a flight to the United States
Oshkosh Corporation beat out several competitors to win a $1.06 billion Marine Corps contract to build the Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected All Terrain Vehicle, a blast-proof truck for U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan
Shape of things to come
A team of Spanish researchers has developed a method of giving humans the power of echolocation or "biosonar" -- used by bats for flying at night; first responders, search-and-rescue teams will be able to "see" through smoke, bodies, walls
Co-operating underwater robots rapidly identify and communicate potential threats in murky waters
U.S. soldiers manning checkpoints in Iraq and Afghanistan are now equipped with lasers which temporarily blind drivers of vehicles speeding toward the check point; earlier lasers at times injured U.S. soldiers
Sanctions on North Korea
NCG is a North Korean nuclear-related company in Pyongyang; today, the U.S. Department of State froze the assets of the and took other measures to isolate it from the U.S. financial and commercial systems
Sanctions on North Korea
U.S. Treasury invokes Executive Order 13382 to freeze the assets of Hong Kong Electronics; since 2007, the company has transferred million so f dollars worth of missile equipment to North Korea
In the trenches // Jon Shamah
Fingerprints still appear to have the edge among biometric technologies; standardization drives down prices and increases choice of vendors, but it reduces the variety of metrics and the languages by which they are described
ADVERTISEMENT
A center based at Washington University's medical school will receive $37 million over five years to continue its research into biodefense and infectious diseases. The funding from the National Institutes of Health was announced Wednesday. The funds will support the study of new or better ways to fight diseases that could be used in a bioterrorism attack. Researchers at the St. Louis lab seek improved ways to prevent and treat anthrax, West Nile fever, and plague. The school says there are 10 other regional centers of excellence in the nation. They also focus on providing scientific expertise to first responders if there is an infectious disease-related emergency.
As he looked at the radar screen Captain Andrey Nozhkin immediately feared the worst. A small vessel was closing fast from the stern
DHS secretary Janet Napolitano swore in sixteen members of the Homeland Security Advisory Council (HSAC) today during her first meeting with HSAC in Albuquerque, N.M.
North Korea is expected to fire a missile toward Hawaii around 4 July; the Pentagon places additional interceptors, and radar is prepared.
Read moreThe Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository project is being deliberately starved for funds by the Obama administration; some argue the United States should use UREX reprocessing technology to reprocess waste (this was the Bush administration's preference); MIT and Harvard scientists say it is perfectly safe to store nuclear waste above ground for 60 or 70 years, while working on a better alternative to UREX .
Read moreLarge organizations, either in the private sector or public sector, always have a churning of staff; the problem is that within one or two cycles of churn, anecdotal knowledge, and other unwritten information, just gets lost from the organizational memory; when something bad happens, few people know those solutions which have proven to work in the past and those that have failed miserably.
Read moreSecurity maven Bruce Schneier says that fears of food-based bioterrorism are exaggerated: The quantities involved for mass poisonings are too great, the nature of the food supply too vast, and the details of any plot too complicated and unpredictable to be a real threat.
Read moreSuicide bombers are a fact of life, so we must learn how to deal with them; there are ways to identify them, and ways to disable them and prevent them from carrying their deadly mission; doing so is not easy or simple, but it can be done.
Read moreThese are not your father's pirates: Somali pirates benefit from information sent to them by informers planted in key shipping hubs around the world; this information includes vessels' cargo, layout, and route -- and is transmitted early enough to allow the pirates enough time to practice their assault based on the information they received.
Read moreDHS announced the award of the first $50 million out of a total of $1 billion made available by the stimulus package for the Transportation Security Administration (TSA); money will fund explosive detection systems and advanced technology X-ray units that will streamline baggage screening at U.S. airports.
Read more2009-2010 © News Wire Publications, LLC