Mission-Critical IT Support Keeps Warfighters Connected
Mission-critical IT networks and services connect deployed forces across U.S. Central Command.
Mission-critical IT networks and services connect deployed forces across U.S. Central Command.
The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) has a dual purpose: conduct research on mental illness and provide research grants to universities and other institutions in similar fields. SAIC’s IT solutions help these two sides of the NIMH — known as intramural and extramural — get their jobs done.
As new threats emerge, it is clear the U.S. Army’s Infantry Brigade Combat Teams (IBCTs) need a lightweight vehicle that provides overwhelming precision, all-weather, shoot-on-the-move firepower that can move rapidly in restricted terrains.
Early detection of tsunamis helps public safety authorities direct coastal populations out of harm’s way, saving countless lives around the world from ocean waves that can be 100 feet high.
For more than a decade, SAIC has been building deep-sea sensor buoys that continuously record and transmit oceanic measurements for use in forecasting and alerts.
The U.S. Army will eventually replace their current fighting vehicles, the M1 Abrams tank and M2 Bradley, with the Next Generation Combat Vehicle (NGCV) based upon the prototypes our team of subject matter experts will provide to the Army. Our team is exploring the realm of possible to not only address present-day conflicts, but also predict the Army’s future needs.
The Army is committed to superiority in current and future missions, and we have an important role in helping the service make decisions that give soldiers operational and tactical advantages and, in many cases, save their lives.
For nearly 15 years, our team members have supported the Maneuver Battle Lab (MBL) at Fort Benning, Georgia, conducting experimentation and evaluation of combat unit structure and equipment to ensure our military’s ongoing pre-eminence.
Command and control hardware and software in fielded Combat Operations Center (COC) systems delivers information about enemy combatants quickly to Marines.
Processing a few megabytes of data can slow down your productivity; now imagine you are a Department of Defense (DoD) scientist or engineer trying to process petabytes.
Behind the science and space exploration scenes at NASA are more than 90 enterprise applications that it relies on to move the organization forward from day to day.
These apps perform essential business functions. Without them, the agency can’t manage its finances, procure supplies, and control building access for their 60,000 people. And engineers working on the largest and most powerful rocket ever, the Space Launch System (SLS), can’t communicate with each other.