The US Air Force (USAF) has officially opened the Kessel Run Experimentation Lab (KREL) to carry out the development of next-generation combat software. If Kessel Run was a movie star, it might be Travolta in 1978 . February 27, 2019. Artificial intelligence-driven drones have the potential to overwhelm defenses while quantum sensors can detect even stealthy submarines beneath the waves by their minute gravitational signatures on the wavetops. Having a growth mindset is a requirement for success at Kessel Run.
If Kessel Run was a movie star, it might be Travolta in 1978 . “Kessel Run is the Air Force’s first real foray into trying to do software better, smarter, faster with modern technology,” explained Alexander Morris, Kessel Run portfolio owner and Air Force civilian employee. Maj. Gen. Sarah Zabel, the Air Force’s director of Information Technology Acquisition Process Development at the Pentagon, cuts the ribbon for the Kessel Run Experimentation Lab opening in Boston May 7, 2018, with Victoria Galvin, KREL’s chief business officer, Capt. The process used to acquire software is archaic and needs to modernize if we are to win in a future peer-to-peer conflict. The Air Force's Kessel Run project has developed innovative approaches to drawing tech talent from within the armed forces, its branch chief detailed in a recent podcast interview with GovernmentCIO Media & Research. The US Air Force (USAF) has officially opened the Kessel Run Experimentation Lab (KREL) to carry out the development of next-generation combat software. “Kessel Run is the Air Force’s first real foray into trying to do software better, smarter, faster with modern technology,” explained Alexander Morris, Kessel Run portfolio owner and Air Force civilian employee. The 90-seat KREL facility has been developed at WeWork’s shared innovation space in Boston’s North End, which usually serves as the home of constantly shifting start-up firms.
“Inside Kessel Run, we have two branches.
“This is the hottest software engineering contract […] Air Force Detachment 12 (Kessel Run) FSI Faculty Mentor: Herbert Lin, Senior Research Scholar at the Center for International Security and Cooperation, Hank J. Holland Fellow in Cyber Policy and Security, Hoover Institution. One is air ops … We’re under wing ops, which handles aircraft maintenance. Maj. Gen. Sarah Zabel, the Air Force’s director of information technology acquisition process development at the Pentagon, cuts the ribbon for the Kessel Run … One is air ops … We’re under wing ops, which handles aircraft maintenance. Airman 1st Class Maxwell Lehmann, 2nd Contracting Squadron specialist, has been a proven example of utilizing his … More than anything, we believe that we should always be learning, both individually and as an organization. Air Force is quietly proving that software development is a warfighting enabler.
The hype is not unfounded. It was officially opened in May last year. The Kessel Run Team receives the Gen. Larry O. Spencer Innovation Award from Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David L. Goldfein, Acting Secretary of the Air Force Matthew Donovan, Chief Master Sgt. Peter is an Emmy Award winning multimedia producer employed at Kessel Run, as a Marketing and Public Relations Specialist. The Air Force Life Cycle Management Center (AFLCMC) manages the Kessel lab at Hanscom Air Force Base in Massachusetts, US. Air Force is quietly proving that software development is a warfighting enabler. Bryon Kroger.
Contracting Airman develops program, joins Kessel Run In today’s war fighting efforts, innovation is a key component when it boils down to who comes out on top. Bryon Kroger, KREL’s chief operating officer and Adam Furtado, KREL’s chief product officer. More software-coding teams are popping up around the Air Force to build on the success of Kessel Run in Boston, the service’s acquisition executive said Friday. Pivotal, a software company, worked with the Air Force’s Kessel Run program to transform tanker refueling schedules with easy-to-use software. About. So for the Air Force, Kessel Run meant speed, which is what the Air Force was trying to do with agile. That is why ground-breaking and out-of-the-box thinking is promoted and needed from all levels of personnel. The US. The 90-seat KREL facility has been developed at WeWork’s shared innovation space in Boston’s North End, which usually serves as the home of constantly shifting start-up firms.