Sun offers Jini to open-source community

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Richard P. Tracy | A CISO's full plate in 2006

This year promises to deliver a full plate of significant IT challenges for federal chief information security officers, who will be looking to create efficiencies within their organizations to free money and manpower that can be spent on new and emerging requirements.

Multinational force tests collaboration

In the world of massively multiplayer online role-playing games, it is common for thousands'even tens of thousands'of players to participate. By that measure, the Joint Forces Command's recent three-week exercise, Multinational Experiment 4, or MNE4 for short, was small potatoes; it had about 800 participants. On the other hand, MNE4's participants were Australia, Canada, Finland, France, Germany, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States, plus NATO.

GSA HSPD-12 testing lab makes progress

The General Services Administration's lab to test vendor products for interoperability under Homeland Security Presidential Directive 12 and Federal Information Processing Standard 201 is ready to review products in six categories.

Agencies want bold ideas for new LOBs

If anyone wanted a chance to help the government shape how it formulates and executes budgets and uses geospatial information in the future, this is your opportunity.

Software insecurity: Plenty of blame to go around

The reason software so often is not secure is the fault either of developers or of users'or both.

Qui Tam Law: The Whistleblower's Sword

Frauds committed against the E-Rate program often are addressed under federal and state qui tam, or whistleblower, laws that allow private citizens to recover part of the funds that a company or individual has taken from the government by fraud.

RFP checklist: Security information management

Looking to deploy a security information management solution? Before sending out an RFP or RFI, experts say you should consider the following.

IG sees flaws in DHS' approach to interoperability standards

The Homeland Security Department faces numerous challenges in effectively promoting interoperable communication standards for first responders, according to inspector general Richard Skinner.

Navy selects vendor for sub combat systems

The Navy has awarded Lockheed Martin Corp. a $17.4 million contract to support a program that oversees all technical products for submarine combat systems.

Portman in line to be OMB director

President Bush this morning announced he is nominating a former congressman to take the helm at the Office of Management and Budget.

E-Rate Probes Target Texas Vendor

The flap over how value-added reseller Micro System Enterprises Inc. and the Houston and Dallas school districts may or may not have abused the E-Rate program shows the pattern of the civil and criminal cases due to emerge over the coming months.

AT&T wins defense contracts

The company will conduct a local-area network upgrade for the Army and Air Force Exchange Services under a three-year, $4.8 million contract.

Denett nominated as new OFPP chief

The White House has nominated Paul Denett to be chief of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy.

PKI is hard, but doesn't have to be this hard

A pair of experts at the 2006 International Conference on Network Security agreed that, with PKI, the perfect often is the enemy of the good.

Wiretaps vulnerable to phreaking

Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have found that it is not at all difficult for bad guys to outwit law enforcement wiretaps on their phone lines.

Tech brief | Flexible supercomputing

Cray Inc. of Seattle announced that its future supercomputers will be built on a uniform, modular platform, starting sometime in 2007.

Tech brief | Hughes on the Net

Hughes Network Systems LLC of Germantown, Md., last month threw its hat into the government networking ring with the launch of HughesNet Managed Network Services.

Tech brief | Virtual private networking

Exceedium Inc. of Jersey City, N.J., has introduced a new version of its Exceedium gatekeeper, a VPN appliance devoted to handling IT operations.

GCN Insider | Tape is dead ... at least for audio

Analog is out and digital is in when it comes to permanently preserving audio recordings, according to a report commissioned by the Library of Congress.

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