Volume 11, Issue 3

More content from Volume 11, Issue 3

I am writing concerning John Rhea's Report from Washington and Elsewhere column entitled, "Faster, Better, Cheaper" in the January issue of Military & Aerospace Electronics.
March 1, 2000
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LAS VEGAS - Although helicopter use is forecast to continue increasing through the first decade of the new millennium, operators also are expected to keep each aircraft in service...
March 1, 2000
WASHINGTON - Defense contractors and their suppliers can breathe a little easier about the availability of money for their hardware programs with the Defense Department's $60 ...
March 1, 2000
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Military and aerospace electronic applications still lack a coherently standard approach to microprocessors, despite a long and frustrating history of attempts to settle on just...
March 1, 2000
SUNNYVALE, Calif. - Engineers at QuickLogic Corp. have designed a 32-bit/33MHz embedded PCI controller for military applications with large data transfer requirements such as ...
March 1, 2000
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa - Engineers at Rockwell Collins of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, are offering a wireless data communications tool that enables personal computers and other data-input...
March 1, 2000
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CHELMSFORD, Mass. - Engineers at Signal Processing Systems (SPS) in San Diego are using Mercury Computer Systems multicomputers originally used for medical imaging for a sonar...
March 1, 2000
WASHINGTON - Stan Levine, acting director of the U.S. Army Digitization Office in the Pentagon will deliver the keynote address April 17 to COTScon East 2000, the third annual...
March 1, 2000
TEMPE, Ariz. - Leaders of Lansdale Semiconductor Inc., an aftermarket integrated circuit manufacturer in Tempe, Ariz., sold their 1985-vintage 10,000-square-foot wafer fab to ...
March 1, 2000
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Today's attack submarine crew must pursue more than enemy submarines; an ever-widening set of responsibilities are pushing submarine designers to upgrade as quickly as possible...
March 1, 2000
WASHINGTON- The big news at NASA is the space agency's reversal of its budget declines of the past seven years. The Clinton Administration's request for NASA is $14.1 billion ...
March 1, 2000