Royal Australian Navy

KBR Announces First Quarter Fiscal 2024 Financial Results

Retrieved on: 
星期二, 四月 30, 2024

HOUSTON, April 30, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- KBR, Inc. (NYSE: KBR) today announced its first quarter fiscal 2024 financial results.

Key Points: 
  • HOUSTON, April 30, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- KBR, Inc. (NYSE: KBR) today announced its first quarter fiscal 2024 financial results.
  • "KBR's extraordinary team has yet again surpassed expectations, delivering outstanding first-quarter results," said Stuart Bradie, KBR's President and CEO.
  • "Our team's unwavering commitment to our customers has led to year-over-year increases across all key financial metrics, particularly in Adjusted EBITDA2 and operating cash flow.
  • Bookings during the quarter were well-aligned with our end markets across energy security, national defense, human performance, and sustainability."

Australian writers have been envisioning AI for a century. Here are 5 stories to read as we grapple with rapid change

Retrieved on: 
星期五, 四月 5, 2024

There is, in fact, more than 100 years’ worth of Australian literature about AI and robotics.

Key Points: 
  • There is, in fact, more than 100 years’ worth of Australian literature about AI and robotics.
  • Nearly 2,000 such works are listed in the AustLit database, a bibliography of Australian literature that includes novels, screenplays, poetry and other kinds of literature.
  • As part of an ongoing project, we are creating a comprehensive list of Australian literature about AI and robots.
  • Here are five Australian literary works of particular relevance to national conversations about AI.

The Automatic Barmaid


The Automatic Barmaid is a short story by Ernest O’Ferrall, who wrote under the pen name “Kodak”. Like his contemporaries Banjo Paterson and Henry Lawson, Kodak was best known as a writer of comedic bush stories.

  • The story concerns an automaton named Gwennie, who at first seems too good to be true, as she is cheaper and more efficient than a human barmaid.
  • The Automatic Barmaid is a humorous depiction of robots as tempting and cheap but not always suitable replacements for human labour.
  • The Automatic Barmaid shows how persistently sceptical we have been about our technologies over the last century, and how much we value human workers’ adaptability and resilience.

The Successors

  • His 1957 short story The Successors begins with a general and a professor meeting while their planet – presumably Earth – is under attack from an unknown race of invaders.
  • The professor muses that, in the end, the humans and the robots are not so different after all.
  • The Successors explores an as yet unachieved scenario.
  • Most current AI systems are what we call “narrow”, and can only complete a limited number of tasks in specific areas.
  • Although many people believe that AGI is still a long way into the future, thinking about extreme future scenarios, like the one in The Successors, can help us identify where we might need to mitigate risk.

Moon in the Ground

  • Keith Antill’s novel Moon in the Ground was published by pioneering Australian science fiction press Norstrilia in 1979.
  • Moon in the Ground speaks to the longstanding connections between defence and robotics, autonomous systems and AI – connections that Australia is now looking to strengthen.
  • However, as Moon in the Ground shows, chasing that power too keenly can be destructive.

The Tic-Toc Boy of Constantinople

  • The Tic-Toc Boy of Constantinople, a short story by Anthony Panegyres, was published in 2014 as part of the steampunk collection Kisses by Clockwork.
  • The story centres on Phyte, a robot who looks and acts like a human boy, apart from having a metal plate on his chest and occasionally producing steam.
  • The Tic-Toc Boy of Constantinople encourages us to think about how bodies are central to our experiences of the world.

Clade


James Bradley’s 2015 cli-fi novel Clade follows a family from the near future living in an increasingly precarious and unpredictable world faced with ecological collapse. AI plays a relatively minor part in the narrative, but when it does appear, it is represented ambivalently.

  • The sims can read and mimic the responses of people who interact with them.
  • The customers start making the dead less like they were and more as they would have preferred them to be.
  • Dylan faces his own ethical dilemma when he comes across a request to build a sim of an ex-girlfriend’s brother.
  • Clade encourages us to think about where our boundaries might be and why.

Making sense of the world


Humans tell stories to make sense of the world. Literary representations have much to tell us about how we understand and respond to the rapidly advancing and seemingly unpredictable technology of AI. To develop AI and robots that best respond to the needs of Australians, we can learn a lot from reading our own literature.
The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Advanced Warfighter Augmentation Solution From Taqtile to Be Demonstrated at Upcoming I/ITSEC

Retrieved on: 
星期四, 十一月 16, 2023

Taqtile, a leader in digital modernization and AR-enabled work-instruction technologies, will be featured in several locations at the upcoming I/ITSEC conference in Orlando, Fla.

Key Points: 
  • Taqtile, a leader in digital modernization and AR-enabled work-instruction technologies, will be featured in several locations at the upcoming I/ITSEC conference in Orlando, Fla.
  • The company’s Manifest ® platform, which provides augmentation for warfighters, will be showcased in the I/ITSEC exhibits of multiple partners and customers.
  • Booth demonstrations will illustrate how Manifest helps warfighters get back in the fight when equipment failures occur in combat.
  • Manifest can also be accessed via a browser, permitting use by devices that are already in the hands of warfighters today.

Why AUKUS is here to stay, despite looming roadblocks

Retrieved on: 
星期日, 九月 17, 2023

AUKUS is a defence agreement among Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States designed to deter Chinese power in the Indo-Pacific region.

Key Points: 
  • AUKUS is a defence agreement among Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States designed to deter Chinese power in the Indo-Pacific region.
  • It’s a long game, something the world should keep in mind as the two-year-old pact faces multiple political complications in U.S. Congress.

Two pillars

    • The partnership is set up into two pillars.
    • Details are still to come about AUKUS Pillar 2 and its focus areas: other advanced (but non-nuclear) defence technologies such as hypersonic weapons, artificial intelligence and quantum computing.
    • It’s also pledging sustained joint involvement of diverse ministries and public agencies — a whole-of-government approach — among all three nations.
    • The other two authorizations involve the sale of Virginia-class submarines to Australia and Australian participation in the American submarine industrial base.

The spectre of Trump

    • But what about a Donald Trump — or Trumpist — comeback in 2024?
    • The stakes of the 2024 presidential election are high.
    • The possibility of civil disorder is real, as is a sharp turn towards authoritarianism.
    • The main Australian political parties are united in boosting the pact’s benefits while minimizing its risks and costs.

Wider support

    • Importantly, support for AUKUS is not confined to the three member states.
    • Japan, Singapore, South Korea, the Philippines and Taiwan have all welcomed the pact as a counterweight to China.
    • The same goes for Canada and New Zealand, both of which are already in the intelligence-pooling Five Eyes partnership with AUKUS nations.
    • Rather than voicing loud concerns about nuclear non-proliferation and regional arms races, India tacitly supports the partnership.

Birdon Welcomes New Additions to its U.S. Board

Retrieved on: 
星期六, 九月 2, 2023

"Kevin and Ron will provide invaluable insight and guidance to our management team as Birdon continues to grow and deliver major programs to its customers," said Birdon CEO and Owner, Jamie Bruce.

Key Points: 
  • "Kevin and Ron will provide invaluable insight and guidance to our management team as Birdon continues to grow and deliver major programs to its customers," said Birdon CEO and Owner, Jamie Bruce.
  • Kevin Mooney has over 37 years of leadership and management experience in both private industry and the U.S. Navy.
  • "I welcome the opportunity to work more closely with the Birdon team during this exciting time for the company."
  • Birdon is successfully delivering on major projects for the Australian Navy, Australian Army, U.S. Army, U.S. Coast Guard and U.S. Navy.

'This is the way the world ends': Nevil Shute's On the Beach warned us of nuclear annihilation. It's still a hot-button issue

Retrieved on: 
星期二, 七月 18, 2023

Eliot’s The Hollow Men (1925), concludes:

Key Points: 
  • Eliot’s The Hollow Men (1925), concludes:
    This is the way the world ends
    Not with a bang but a whimper.
  • This is the way the world ends
    Not with a bang but a whimper.
  • Indeed, Nevil Shute’s classic novel of nuclear annihilation, On the Beach, published in June 1957, used Eliot’s famous lines as an epigraph.

‘Australia’s most important novel’

    • Journalist Gideon Haigh calls On the Beach “arguably Australia’s most important novel – important in the sense of confronting a mass international audience with the defining issue of the age”.
    • In this last of meeting places
      We grope together
      And avoid speech
      Gathered on this beach of the tumid river.
    • This comes to the fore in the following passage, which focuses on a dinner party hosted by Lieutenant Commander Peter Holmes of the Royal Australian Navy.
    • The atmosphere is both claustrophobic and delirious:
      For three hours they danced and drank together, sedulously avoiding any serious topic of conversation.
    • The reason why the guests at Peter’s party are so keen to avoid serious talk is both simple and depressing.
    • This is the way Shute’s novel of nuclear extinction ends: not with a bang but with a whimper.
    • Released at the height of the Cold War, On the Beach struck a chord with millions of concerned readers.

Usefully entertaining

    • A copy had found its way to the desk of John F. Kennedy, the next president of the United States.
    • Shute famously detested the movie, which received decidedly mixed reviews.
    • Her husband’s reply is revealing:
      ‘I don’t know […] Some kinds of silliness you just can’t stop,’ he said.
    • While the science in the novel was somewhat flawed, Shute’s cautionary tale undoubtedly spoke to the collective zeitgeist.
    • Read more:
      Friday essay: if growing US-China rivalry leads to 'the worst war ever', what should Australia do?

Enduring influence

    • The influence of Shute’s novel, which was remade in 2000 as a film for Australian television, can be observed in various post-apocalyptic works, including George Miller’s Mad Max franchise and the late Cormac McCarthy’s The Road.
    • It seems increasingly likely the world as we know it is coming to an end – if it hasn’t already.
    • On The Beach runs at the Sydney Theatre Company 24 July to 12 August 2023, with previews 18–21 July.

Asterix Shows Its Mettle in Another Successful Circumnavigation

Retrieved on: 
星期二, 六月 27, 2023

VICTORIA, British Columbia, June 27, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Combat Support Ship (CSS) Asterix today arrived in Victoria, British Columbia following a highly successful circumnavigation departing from Halifax, Nova Scotia in January 2023.

Key Points: 
  • VICTORIA, British Columbia, June 27, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Combat Support Ship (CSS) Asterix today arrived in Victoria, British Columbia following a highly successful circumnavigation departing from Halifax, Nova Scotia in January 2023.
  • Following the departure of CSS Asterix from Halifax, she headed into the Mediterranean Sea and through the Suez Canal.
  • Asterix was the second naval vessel on scene in Sudan when hostilities broke out earlier this year.
  • CSS Asterix was designated the U.S. Navy’s At Sea Command Platform for Task Force Red Sea (CTG 55.2).

AR-Innovator Taqtile Featured at SXSW Army Applications Lab and Captal Factory Event

Retrieved on: 
星期日, 三月 12, 2023

Army mechanics can access and follow Manifest’s spatially anchored, step-by-step instructions with embedded multimedia content to efficiently perform complex inspection and maintenance tasks.

Key Points: 
  • Army mechanics can access and follow Manifest’s spatially anchored, step-by-step instructions with embedded multimedia content to efficiently perform complex inspection and maintenance tasks.
  • With Manifest and an iPad or head mounted device, completion of these tasks is safer, more efficient, and more accurate than using outdated paper-based processes.
  • Manifest also delivers additional support when needed, giving motor pool personnel real-time access to AR-enabled guidance from expert Army technicians, anywhere, anytime.
  • “Manifest’s ability to support Army personnel through AR-enabled technology is on full display at the ‘Bots by the Bridge’ event,” said Andrew Yakulis, Director of Corporate Ventures for AAL.

4-Star General Thomas Schwartz, USA, Retired, Joins AR-Enabled Work-Instruction Software Innovator, Taqtile, as Strategic Advisor

Retrieved on: 
星期三, 十二月 7, 2022

Decorated 4-Star General Thomas A. Schwartz, USA, Ret., has joined Taqtile as a Strategic Advisor in Taqtiles growing global defense business.

Key Points: 
  • Decorated 4-Star General Thomas A. Schwartz, USA, Ret., has joined Taqtile as a Strategic Advisor in Taqtiles growing global defense business.
  • General Schwartz will advise and support the evolution and adoption of the companys trusted Manifest platform for use in the defense industry.
  • View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20221207005204/en/
    4-Star General Thomas A. Schwartz, USA, retired, joins augmented reality (AR)-enabled work-instruction software innovator, Taqtile, as a strategic advisor (Photo: Business Wire)
    Over his distinguished career, General Schwartz has held numerous leadership positions in Korea, Germany, and the U.S.
  • General Schwartz graduated from West Point in 1967 and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Infantry.

SPEE3D Introduces XSPEE3D: The World's Fastest All-In-One Containerised Metal 3D Printer

Retrieved on: 
星期一, 十月 3, 2022

LAND FORCES, BRISBANE, Australia, Oct. 3, 2022 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- SPEE3D, makers of the world's fastest metal 3D printers, today unveiled its XSPEE3D printer – a containerised, ruggedized, and deployable cold-spray metal 3D printer that provides all of the necessary functions to print metal parts from anywhere in just minutes. XSPEE3D was designed based on extensive field work and collaboration with the Australian Army.

Key Points: 
  • LAND FORCES, BRISBANE, Australia, Oct. 3, 2022 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- SPEE3D, makers of the world's fastest metal 3D printers, today unveiled its XSPEE3D printer a containerised, ruggedized, and deployable cold-spray metal 3D printer that provides all of the necessary functions to print metal parts from anywhere in just minutes.
  • XSPEE3D is fully transportable as a standard shipping container with the printer and all auxiliary equipment in one box.
  • The printer is easy to use and deploy, requiring only a connection to electrical power.
  • SPEE3D is a world-leading additive manufacturing technology supplier dedicated to the research, development, and delivery of metal 3D printers and integrated systems utilising its patented cold-spray technology.