Does Technology Win Wars? The U.S. Military Needs Low-Cost Innovation—Not Big-Ticket Boondoggles
It is ironic that, despite two decades of U.S.-led conflict in Afghanistan and Iraq, it took just a few months of Russia’s war in Ukraine to finally draw attention to the depleted state of U.S. weapons stocks and the vulnerabilities in U.S. military supply chains. In recent months, American military leaders have expressed increasing frustration with the defense industrial base. As the U.S. Navy’s top officer, Admiral Mike Gilday, told Defense News in January, “Not only am I trying to fill magazines with weapons, but I’m trying to put U.S. production lines at their maximum level right now and to try and maintain that set of headlights in subsequent budgets so that we continue to produce those weapons.” The fighting in Ukraine, Gilday noted, has made it clear to military leaders “that the expenditure of those high-end weapons in conflict could be higher than we estimated.”
Tellingly, just 100 days
For many years, Filipino net users had enjoyed accessing on-line by way of unlimited data services offered by telecommunication firms in the country. If you use your own Wireless card, it need to support the 802.1 1B wireless protocol. As such there is an further want for that added horsepower that you can get from a very good wireless gaming router. I spoke to a number of locksmiths and security system providers and they all said this wasn’t feasible.