• Boston bombing reveals IT gaps

    The response to the bombing at the Boston Marathon finish line this week held plenty of positives for coordination and planning, but it also highlighted a glaring weakness in that patient records were hard to come by.

    David Delano, project director at Massachusetts eHealth Collaborative, said the next phase of the state’s health information exchange initiative, known as Mass HIway, will have a query capability for providers that participate. So, if a patient from another participating system comes in during an emergency, their records can be accessed, he told MedCity News.

    That kind of access to medical records during an emergency like the bombing in Boston is the holy grail of health information exchange networks, Delano said.

    Read More

  • Nick Wakeman

    Sequestration's pain is yet to come

    Once the 2013 budget was settled, industry and government breathed a sigh of relief. The crisis was averted. We have some budget visibility, at least for the next few months.

    Yes, sequestration kicked in, but, hey, it hasn’t been that bad, right?

    But I think some folks have forgotten that sequestration was never going to have a sudden impact. It would take weeks and months before its impact would occur. That’s why, so far, sequestration has really only been talk: "This is what we might do," "This is what can happen."

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  • CLOUD

    Maybe there's an easier way to find cloud vendors

    If you’re an enterprise customer looking to find the right cloud vendors, then InspectorJones.com might be the right stop for you, according to The Sacramento Bee. Inspector Jones is said to give companies a way to find the best fit for their company, focusing on reviews of cloud service quality. These reviews cover things like security measures, compliance with standards, company health, data centers, and general track record, The Sacramento Bee reported.

    Damian Bramanis, Inspector Jones founder, described what it was like beginning such a venture, telling the Bee that the “search was painstaking. There are a lot of cloud vendors, and it's not easy to figure out who's good and who's not."

    Read More

  • NAVY

    Raytheon wins $30M Navy contract to improve battlefield sensors

    Raytheon Co. has won a $30 million contract modification with the U.S. Navy for design agent and engineering services in support of the Cooperative Engagement Capabilities program, or CEC.

    This modification is cost-plus-fixed-fee and cost-only, the Defense Department said in a release.

    Read More

  • PEOPLE

    BAE names new SVP of government relations

    BAE Systems has named Frank Ruggiero senior vice president of government relations, where he oversee the company’s relationships with members of Congress, the Defense Department, and other cabinet-level organizations and state government leaders.

    He replaces Erin Moseley, who was promoted to president of the company’s Support Solutions sector in the middle of February.

    Read More

  • M&A SPECIAL REPORT

    Who made 2012's biggest deals?

    Our dedicated group of mergers and acquisition experts combed through the 103 deals in our annual round up and picked the best deals in a variety of categories.

    This year we have thirteen categories and some are noteworthy for the size but size isn’t the deciding factors. These transactions in many cases were transformative and either created new players or took established companies and strengthened their position in the market.

    Read More

  • AIR FORCE

    Sage Management Enterprise to take on sensor engineering project

    Sage Management Enterprise LLC has won a $8 million contract with the U.S. Air Force to provide multi-integration sensor engineering reports.

    Under the cost-plus-fixed-fee contract, Sage will provide the services necessary to develop and manage sensors, develop system specifications and interface standards, develop data standards and concepts of operation, the Defense Department said in a release.

    Read More

  • M&A SPECIAL REPORT

    103 deals chasing the next big thing

    Several factors were at play in the 103 mergers and acquisitions that closed in 2012, but two common themes were transformation and anticipation.

    The prevailing wisdom says that in a market where budget uncertainty rules the day, investing millions in an acquisition might not be a wise use of resources. But government contractors are forever in search of the next hot opportunity. That above all else is what Washington Technology’s annual M&A roundup teaches us.

    Read More

  • NAVY

    GD Electric Boat wins $9.5M contract mod for sub work

    General Dynamics Electric Boat has won a $9.5 million contract modification with the U.S. Navy for maintenance and modernization work on the submarine USS Hartford.

    This modification is part of a $67 million contract awarded to General Dynamics Electric Boat in April 2012.

    Under the contract, the company will perform work at the company’s shipyard in Groton, Conn., General Dynamics said in a release. The USS Hartford is a Los Angeles-class attack submarine.

    Work is expected to be completed by September.

    Read More

  • CLOUD

    Microsoft sets sights on Amazon with cloud offering

    Microsoft is set to open a new service that competes with Amazon’s cloud offering, according to The New York Times. The company has been testing its service with customers over the past year, and feels confident enough to commit to match Amazon’s prices for its cloud service, the Elastic Compute Cloud.

    Read More

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