National Reconnaissance Office News
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A Boston-based investment company plans to announce agreements today with Defense Department laboratories that it says can speed the transfer of military technology for commercial uses.
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The U.S. Defense Department and National Reconnaissance Office plan to spend $15 billion on rocket booster cores without enough information to determine whether they’re getting a “fair and reasonable” price, according to government auditors.
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An intense small boy tries to hit a ball as his pals hang about watching. Other kids climb a wall. No cars, no adults, this tough street is a refuge and playground.
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Lockheed Martin Corp ., Boeing Co . and Northrop Grumman Corp . satellite and launch services are among 13 major programs boosted in the U.S. Air Force’s space budget of $31.7 billion through 2016.
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The director of the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office said today that the nation’s spy satellite programs are now on schedule and cost.
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In June, the National Security Agency announced that it had declassified 50,000 pages of historic documents. The action, the highly secretive spy agency said in a press release, was proof of its commitment to meeting a goal President Barack Obama outlined on his first day in office: “creating an unprecedented level of openness in government.”
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Congress ordered the Defense Department to develop a plan to use more cloud-computing services, a move that may lead to U.S. contracts for suppliers including Microsoft Corp., Google Inc. and Amazon.com Inc.
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Elon Musk, chief executive officer of Space Exploration Technologies Corp., said extending a U.S. space launch “monopoly” controlled by Boeing Co. and Lockheed Martin Corp. would be a mistake.
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