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  • DoD selects industry partner to embed AI into programmes and systems

    May 22, 2020

    DoD selects industry partner to embed AI into programmes and systems

    21st May 2020 - 10:21 GMT | by The Shephard News Team Booz Allen Hamilton will deliver AI-enabled products to the US Joint Artificial Intelligence Center (JAIC) under a $800 million contract from the GSA Federal Systems Integration and Management Center. If all options are exercised, work will be completed in May 2025. AI tools will support warfighting operations and be instrumental in embedding AI decision-making and analysis at all tiers of DoD operations. Booz Allen Hamilton will oversee a mix of technical services and products across the full spectrum of technical support to the JAIC Joint Warfighter National Mission Initiative. Work will include data labelling, data management, data conditioning, AI product development and the transition of AI products into new and existing fielded programmes and systems across the DoD. According to the DoD, the overall aim is to leverage the power of data to enable a ‘transformational shift across the DoD that will give the U.S. a definitive information advantage to prepare for future warfare operations'. https://www.shephardmedia.com/news/digital-battlespace/dod-selects-industry-partner-embed-ai-programmes-a/

  • Announcement of an SBIR/STTR Opportunity

    May 22, 2020

    Announcement of an SBIR/STTR Opportunity

    Announcement of an SBIR/STTR Opportunity Under Broad Agency Announcement (BAA) HR001120S0019 Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) May 13, 2020 The DARPA Small Business Programs Office (SBPO) has pre-released the following SBIR/STTR Opportunities (SBOs): "Compact Modular Detector for Water and Food Contaminants", Announcement Number HR001120S0019-07, published at https://beta.sam.gov/search?keywords=HR001120S0019-07 "Near-Term Forecasting of Nonstationary Dynamic Processes", Announcement Number HR001120S0019-08, published at https://beta.sam.gov/search?keywords=HR001120S0019-08 "Organizational Modeling", Announcement Number HR001120S0019-09, published at https://beta.sam.gov/search?keywords=HR001120S0019-09 “Flexible Manufacturing of Fine Chemical Reagents", Announcement Number HR001120S0019-10, published at https://beta.sam.gov/search?keywords=HR001120S0019-10 These SBOs will open for proposals on May 28, 2020 and close on June 29, 2020 at 2:00pm ET

  • UnmannedCanada.20 Update: We’re Going Online and Remote!

    May 22, 2020

    UnmannedCanada.20 Update: We’re Going Online and Remote!

    May 20, 2020 – Ottawa – ON USC-STC today announces our decision to move our signature Unmanned Canada Conference and Exhibition online to hold it remotely in 2020. We are keeping our scheduled dates – with all events taking place the week of November 2-6. In this COVID-19 era, we wanted to ensure we could provide the same great experience, keynote speakers, informative speaker tracks and the opportunity to allow our sponsors and exhibitors to tell you about their products and services. We've figured it out! #UC20Remote is coming. https://www.unmannedsystems.ca/unmannedcanada-20-update-were-going-online-and-remote/

  • Air Force’s Roper: 3D Printing ‘Going Like Gangbusters’

    May 19, 2020

    Air Force’s Roper: 3D Printing ‘Going Like Gangbusters’

    "I've been so passionate about bringing in additive manufacturing, and small batch digital manufacturing, to help on aircraft parts availability," Air Force acquisition head Will Roper says. By THERESA HITCHENSon May 15, 2020 at 12:54 PM WASHINGTON: The Air and Space Forces are speeding efforts to adopt 3D printing as a major pillar of force sustainment, now making critical spare parts for weapon systems such as engine components for fighters and rockets. “Additive and advanced manufacturing [has] been going like gangbusters across the Air Force and Space Force — printing thousands of parts for airplanes,” Air Force acquisition head Will Roper said yesterday. “We're starting to print parts for satellites, including propulsion.” And today, the Air Force Rapid Sustainability Office (RSO) announced that it had reached a first milestone in its collaboration with General Electric to 3D print metal engine parts for aircraft — printing a metal sump pump for F-110 engines used by both F-15 and F-16 fighter jets. According to the announcement, the next phase of the program — Phase 1B , now being planned — will involve a family of parts on the TF34 engine, which has been in service for more than 40 years. “The collaborative effort between the US Air Force and GE shows great promise toward the adoption of metal 3D printed parts as an option to solve the US Air Force's current and future sustainment challenges,” Col. Benjamin Boehm, director of propulsion at the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center (AFLCMC) said in a press release. “This capability provides an alternate method to source parts for legacy propulsion systems throughout their life cycle, especially when faced with a diminishing supplier base or when infrequent demands or low volume orders are not attractive to traditional manufacturers.” GE originally approached the Air Force with the idea of a collaboration on 3D printed parts in 2019, and in April this year the service brought in the Defense Logistics Agency to help certify the GE-made parts for airworthiness. ALCMC, as we reported way back in September at the Air Force Association shindig, has also been pushing to get its depots around the country certified to print their own spare parts, beginning with those not critical to life and death. Air Force leaders see additive manufacturing as key to resolving the service's serious problems in maintaining aging aircraft and infrastructure and lowering costs. That said, the new 3D sump pump cover is an important piece of the engine. “Compared to other parts on the F110 engine, the sump cover might have lower functionality, but is incredibly important. It needs to be durable, form a seal and it needs to work for the entire engine to function – which is of course critical on a single engine aircraft like the F-16,” said James Bonar, engineering manager at GE Additive. The RSO-GE program is using a spiral development model, increasing the complexity and scale of parts printing with each phase. “In this program, complexity involves moving from simpler part identification, progressing to part and family of parts consolidation and eventually tackling complex components and systems, such as common core heat exchangers,” the press release said. Roper told reporters yesterday in a Zoom briefing that due to the COVID-19 pandemic, RSO has transformed its planned Advanced Manufacturing Olympics, originally planned to coincide with the now-postponed Tokyo Summer Olympics in late July, to a virtual event to be held November. It will allow 3D printing companies to show off their wares to potential service customers via a number of challenges, including a “printer shoot-off” and a “Box of Parts” challenge where manufacturers will compete to create a drone part without a blueprint. “We have been growing our network of small batch makers across the Air Force and Space Force,” Roper said. “I've been so passionate about bringing in additive manufacturing, and small batch digital manufacturing, to help on aircraft parts availability.” The COVID-19 crises has proven the “additive” value of tapping into a network of small manufacturers as the Air Force has scrambled to obtain personal protective equipment for airmen at far-flung bases, he explained. Because many large producers of items like face masks are overwhelmed, the service set up the “Air Force Rapid Advanced Manufacturing Portal,” or “AFRAMP,” as a method of finding and vetting small producers to meet service needs. “It's a portal where small batch manufacturers can make their capabilities known — show what they're able to produce — we vet them, and that then allows these small companies in aggregate to add up to large batch manufacturing,” Roper said. “We've already delivered over 11,000, different PPE devices to seven air bases that wouldn't have otherwise been able to get access for personal protective gear.” His hope is to expand that portal to other types of advanced manufacturing in the future. “I'm excited about scaling it up beyond just personal protective gear, and really having it be a one-stop-shop in the government for companies that can make things in small quantity — that can't mass produce, but can produce in mass if they're added up with a lot of their other sister companies.” https://breakingdefense.com/2020/05/air-forces-roper-3d-printing-going-like-gangbusters/

  • Rapports de l'Institut du Québec
  • Informations IATA - 13 mai
  • Fonds d’aide et de relance régionale

    May 14, 2020

    Fonds d’aide et de relance régionale

    De Développement économique Canada pour les régions du Québec Appui aux entreprises et organismes du Québec touchés par la pandémie de COVID-19 En complément au Plan d'intervention économique du Canada pour répondre à la COVID-19, le gouvernement du Canada a mis en place le Fonds d'aide et de relance régionale (FARR), une initiative dotée d'une enveloppe de 211 M$ pour le Québec. Un financement adapté aux besoins des entreprises et des organismes d'ici Au Québec, le FARR est mis en œuvre par DEC. Il propose : un appui financier aux PME vulnérables qui ne sont pas admissibles aux mesures déjà mises en place et qui sont aux prises avec des difficultés de liquidités. une aide aux entreprises et aux organismes en leur donnant un accès indispensable au capital dans les communautés rurales desservies par les Sociétés d'aide au développement des collectivités (SADC) et les Centres d'aide aux entreprises (CAE). Consultez les détails du programme ou notre foire aux questions pour en savoir plus sur les modalités du FARR. Pour faire une demande de financement Si votre entreprise ou votre organisme n'a pas accès à l'aide fédérale déjà en place, identifiez d'abord le profil qui correspond le mieux à votre situation : Profil 1 Entreprises ayant un chiffre d'affaires de 250 000 $ et plus dans les secteurs suivants : Secteur manufacturier Services à valeur ajoutée (savoir-faire distinctif, offre de service innovante – p. ex. : production de contenus numériques, technologie, intelligence artificielle, contribution à la transition technologique ou à l'économie verte) Entreprises touristiques nécessitant un financement de 40 000 $ et plus Entreprises en démarrage à fort potentiel dans les secteurs manufacturier et de services à valeur ajoutée OBNL à vocation économique qui œuvrent dans les secteurs ci-dessus, ou qui appuient les entreprises dans ces secteurs Cela décrit votre situation? Confirmez votre préadmissibilité en répondant à 5 questions Profil 2 Entreprises ayant un chiffre d'affaires de moins de 250 000 $ dans les secteurs manufacturier et de services à valeur ajoutée Entreprises en démarrage (autres que dans les secteurs manufacturier et de services à valeur ajoutée) Entreprises touristiques nécessitant un financement de moins de 40 000 $ Commerces de détail, services de proximité, services professionnels et de santé (p. ex. : restaurant, boulangerie, dépanneur, salon de coiffure, maison funéraire, nettoyeur, concessionnaire automobile, magasin à grande surface, services comptables ou juridiques, dentiste, services immobiliers) Entreprises d'économie sociale (tous secteurs) Agriculture et pêches (cueillette et récolte) Entreprises de production artisanale et produits du terroir Travailleurs autonomes et entreprises individuelles (tous secteurs) Cela décrit votre situation? Si vous êtes à l'extérieur d'une région métropolitaine : Si vous êtes à l'intérieur d'une région métropolitaine :... ... Si vous êtes à l'extérieur des régions métropolitaines : communiquez avec votre SADC ou votre CAE. Si vous êtes à l'intérieur d'une région métropolitaine : composez le 1-800-561-0633. Vous n'êtes pas certain quelle situation s'applique à vous? Si votre entreprise ou organisme est domicilié au Québec, composez le 1-800-561-0633 ou envoyez-nous un courriel. Nos conseillers pourront vous guider. https://dec.canada.ca/fra/appui-cible/farr/index.html

  • Montréal Inc | Informations utiles 11 mai

    May 12, 2020

    Montréal Inc | Informations utiles 11 mai

    Afin de continuer de vous fournir un contenu plus riche, nous enverrons dorénavant notre infolettre aux deux semaines. Prochain envoi : lundi 25 mai. On vous accompagne dans cette infolettre conjointe de Montréal inc., Bonjour Startup Montréal, Maison Notman et OSMO ! Découvrez nos initiatives, celles de l'écosystème, ainsi que des articles qui font du bien. Nos initiatives conjointes Nos webinaires à venir Chaque mercredi, on vous donne RDV à 14h avec des invités de choix ! 13 mai 2020 - 14h Rachel Bendayan, députée d'Outremont et Secrétaire parlementaire de la ministre de la Petite Entreprise, de la Promotion des exportations et du Commerce international : le rôle crucial qu'a joué le gouvernement jusqu'à maintenant et sa perspective sur la relance. Francis Davidson, co-fondateur et CEO de Sonder : sa vision de la crise et les opportunités pour son entreprise. Chris Arsenault, Associé, iNovia capital : sa perspective comme investisseur et les tendances qui se mettent en place. INSCRIPTION Retrouvez tous les enregistrements de nos webinaires ici Nos appels de candidatures Encore quelques jours pour s'inscrire au défi COVID! Avez-vous une idée de solution innovante pour les secteurs de la santé, de l'éducation ou de l'emploi? Vous pourriez courir la chance de réaliser votre projet avec l'aide de coachs experts dans leur domaine. . Vous avez jusqu'au 15 mai 2020 pour soumettre votre candidature. Plus d'informations sur http://post-covid.ca Le défi COVID est une initiative portée par Bonjour Startup Montréal, Desjardins (Coopérathon) et Google Canada, avec la collaboration du Gouvernement du Québec, Real Ventures, Maison Notman, Techstars AI Montréal, Montréal inc., OSMO Innovation, Startup Québec, CTREQ, Humanov-is et Google For Startups. M'INSCRIRE Programme Entreprendre au féminin On recrute ! Appliquez avant le 18 mai pour faire partie de la prochaine cohorte d'Entreprendre au féminin ! Vous êtes une femme avec une idée d'entreprise, souhaitez sauter dans l'aventure entrepreneuriale, mais vous ne savez pas par quoi commencer ? Faites de vos freins un mauvais souvenir, Montréal inc. et ses partenaires vous donnent toutes les clés pour concrétiser votre projet. Outils, ressources, coachings, développement du réseau et rencontres avec des entrepreneures inspirantes : voici ce qui vous attend dans le programme Entreprendre au féminin, adapté à la crise. N'attendez plus et appliquez dès maintenant pour faire partie de la prochaine cohorte. Prenez en même temps une pause d'inspiration avec les derniers épisodes de notre websérie : découvrez Anne Martel, co-fondatrice d'Element AI et Elizabeth Stefanka, fondatrice de Stefanka, qui nous parlent d'entraide et d'innovation, des valeurs essentielles en entrepreneuriat ! EN SAVOIR PLUS Nos ressources et outils Aide à la recherche de financement Montréal inc. offre le soutien gratuit de deux conseillers en financement pour vous orienter vers les meilleures ressources disponibles selon votre besoin. Prenez un rendez-vous avec Marcos Pereira ou Denis Karegeya. Initiatives de soutien de l'écosystème Montréal Newtech présente “Connecting Intelligence: Collaborative Innovation in times of Covid-19” Le 12 mai à 12h, aura lieu une édition spéciale de Connecting Intelligence avec des représentants de tous les écosystèmes startups du monde mais aussi la première édition 2020 des Canadian Ecosystems Gatherings (CEG) pour échanger dans des groupes de travail sur les réponses des différents écosystèmes durant la crise de la COVID. Événement en anglais. S'INSCRIRE Le Cercle Lean Startup Montréal propose Pivot-19 Issue de notre “task force” sur les startups en ralentissement important, l'initiative Pivot-19 est un guide pratique développé gr'ce à la collaboration du Cercle Lean Startup Montréal pour entrepreneurs qui souhaitent effectuer un pivot en 4 étapes et ainsi créer un modèle d'affaires alternatif durant la pandémie ou tout simplement pour rester actif durant le ralentissement des activités de l'entreprise. LE GUIDE L'École des entrepreneurs du Québec lance Previsio Un outil en ligne gratuit de prévisions financières pensé par des entrepreneurs, pour des entrepreneurs, afin de prendre des décisions éclairées et de soumettre des demandes de financement plus réalistes. https://previsio.ca/ EN SAVOIR PLUS Rapport du Innovation Economy Council Comment les startups tech canadiennes peuvent diriger la reprise après la COVID-19. En anglais seulement. LE RAPPORT Innovation Economy Council Report How Canada's tech startups can drive the recovery from COVID-19. LE RAPPORT Fundica INFOGRAPHIES SUR LE FINANCEMENT Ces lectures qui font du bien!? Cinq idées pour la relance de Montréal - La Presse 3 mamans qui ont la bosse des affaires - Devenir Entrepreneur 5 ways AI is helping put the brakes on COVID-19 - MaRS Quand les grandes entreprises font leur part - Novae Retrouvez sur le site web de Bonjour Startup Montréal des informations et ressources clés: récapitulatif des mesures gouvernementales, offres d'emploi, webinaires, événements à surveiller, et plus encore. ► DECOUVREZ LA SECTION MISSION COVID-19 ◀︎ Retrouvez en ligne des ressources développées par et pour la communauté startup: ► Un document collaboratif de partage d'offres d'emploi ◀︎ ► Un document collaboratif de ressources COVID-19 ◀︎ Faites appel à un réseau de +50 experts bénévoles pour vous aider à adapter votre modèle d'affaires. Demandez une rencontre à coach@montrealinc.ca. ► EN SAVOIR PLUS ◀︎ Rejoignez la communauté startup sur Slack

  • NATO’s ‘startup’ charts a bold future in maritime unmanned systems

    May 6, 2020

    NATO’s ‘startup’ charts a bold future in maritime unmanned systems

    By: Michael D. Brasseur , Rob Murray , and Sean Trevethan Last December, at their meeting in London, NATO leaders declared: “To stay secure, we must look to the future together. We are addressing the breadth and scale of new technologies to maintain our technological edge, while preserving our values and norms.” These two sentences were, in part, a nod to a significant piece of work the alliance is undertaking within the broader mandate of alliance innovation — NATO's Maritime Unmanned Systems Initiative. Granted, on its own this sounds both technical and narrow within the context of emerging technology, a context that includes: artificial intelligence, data, space, hypersonic weapons, bio technologies, quantum research, autonomy and more. So why are maritime unmanned systems relevant now? Simply put, developing the numbers of manned submarines, aircraft and ships required to keep pace with potential adversaries is simply not economically viable (almost $3 billion per Virginia-class U.S. submarine). Not since the Cold War has NATO needed the volume of maritime forces to protect our seas and oceans from would-be foes. NATO's areas of interest are expanding. As climate change affects the Arctic, new maritime routes are being created, which Russia in particular is exploiting with its submarines and ships. This matters because it exposes a new flank on NATO's high-north periphery, and if left unchecked is a potential vulnerability whilst also being a potential opportunity; this, coupled with an increasing need to protect our undersea data infrastructure means NATO's geostrategic responsibilities continue to grow. Therefore, if allies are to reinforce NATO's maritime posture, deter Russian aggression, guard against Chinese activity, and protect both critical national infrastructure and our sea lines of communication, NATO must do things differently and at the speed of relevance. NATO's Maritime Unmanned Systems Initiative was agreed by 13 defense ministers in October 2018. Since then, the initiative's success has attracted the participation of three more allies and garnered significant interest from all of NATO's maritime nations. The political agreement struck in 2018 provided the mandate for NATO to bring together disparate strands of common work ongoing within nations. NATO, acting as a network, enabled allies to become greater than the sum of their parts. The focus is threefold: utilize world-leading research to increase allied interoperability between conventional forces and unmanned drones; establish new tactics for our sailors to truly leverage these technologies; and develop secure digital communications for military drones across all domains (air, sea and land). Addressing these priorities together will enable this effort to be scaled across the alliance, at pace. To date, the speed of this effort has been breathtaking. So much so that even the United States and the United Kingdom — two allies who have invested the most in this area — are using the NATO initiative as a catalyst for their own national efforts. The last 12-plus months has seen the creation of a NATO project office, a governance body, as well as the planning and successful execution of the world's largest and most complex maritime unmanned systems exercise off the Portuguese coast in September 2019. This event brought together the very best from our navies, industry, scientific institutes and academia. The results were hugely impressive, with many “world firsts” including maritime unmanned systems augmenting conventional forces through multiple scenarios. We now have vast swaths of insight and information to start achieving those three goals of improving interoperability, enhancing our tactics and developing secure communications. The goal of improving allied interoperability is actually about enhancing standards. A topic often overlooked at the policy level but critical to the DNA of the NATO alliance. Standards drive interoperability, which in turn drives readiness, which ultimately aids deterrence. As NATO leads the development of new technologies, so too must come new standards that our industries and military can implement. Open architectures will be key, but allies and industry need to realize that we need to solve problems — not address requirements. No perfect solution will ever be delivered on the first attempt. The alliance will need to both innovate and iterate on operations in order to maintain advantage. This may be a cultural shift to some acquisition purists who are used to developing complex warships over 20-plus-year time frames. However, the challenge remains our ability to scale. With this project we have an agile global team functioning across multiple national and allied bureaucracies, each with their own culture and ways of working. Through engagement and investment, this team is yielding disproportionate results. Indeed, 2019 demonstrated what can be done with some imagination, effort and focus. But continual growth at speed will require faith by allies to maintain the course. Such is the nature of true change and innovation. There is a lot to do, and the stakes are high. Near-peer competitors are once again very real. Despite the global lockdown caused by the new coronavirus, COVID-19, the initiative continues to progress through synthetic networks and simulation, driven by passion and intent. Our economy, our data and its infrastructure still need protecting, now more than ever. This effort strives to accelerate maritime unmanned systems into NATO's arsenal to patrol the vast swaths of ocean and offset evolving threats. Success will be seen because it is being built on allied nations' shared values and norms, the same values and norms that NATO leaders recognized in London last year. Michael D. Brasseur is the director of naval armaments cooperation for the U.S. mission to NATO. He is also the first director of NATO's “startup,” the Maritime Unmanned Systems Innovation and Coordination Cell. Rob Murray is the head of innovation at NATO Headquarters. Sean Trevethan is the fleet robotics officer of the British Royal Navy, working in the future capability division at Navy Command Headquarters in Portsmouth, England. https://www.defensenews.com/opinion/commentary/2020/04/20/natos-start-up-charts-a-bold-future-in-maritime-unmanned-systems

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