Unisys Wins Contract to Provide IT Support for NASA Langley Flight Simulations

Published: 10 February 2016 y., Wednesday

Unisys received a contract from NASA Langley Research Center (LaRC) to continue to deliver advanced hardware, software, and systems integration for flight simulation projects at the agency. The Reston, Va.-based tech firm will “design, test, integrate, operate, maintain, and modify systems” that support Langley’s flight simulation research.

This recent deal, which Unysis announced on Feb. 4,  extends the business partnership between the tech firm and NASA LaRC to almost 40 years. During that time, Unisys created the agency’s Langley Standard Real-Time Simulation in C++, a general software infrastructure that NASALaRC said has saved it approximately $17 million over a 10-year period, according to the press release.

“Unisys has the understanding, expertise, and capability to meet constantly changing requirements in a timely and cost-efficient manner while also minimizing risks,” said Casey Coleman, Unisys Federal group vice president for civilian agencies. “This contract award will give us the opportunity to expand or extend our work with NASA, supporting important research in aeronautics and space, including unmanned flight and other initiatives.”

The current contract contains a three-year base period, with a two-year option that, if exercised, could boost the contract to $38.4 million. According to the press release, this move represents for Unisys “a growing portfolio of advanced application services, cloud computing, data analytics, mobile, and security solutions.”

Šaltinis: meritalk.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Latvian Association of the Internet.

The representatives of the Latvian firms, business of which is connected with the Internet, have founded the Latvian association of the Internet. more »

Intel's new chip to be called Pentium 4

Intel will call Willamette, its next-generation processor, the Pentium 4. more »

FBI Intervenes in Planned Sale Of Internet Service to Japanese

The FBI is raising national security concerns about a Japanese telecommunications giant's planned acquisition of a U.S. Internet company. more »

Shopping portal cancels free Net access

Online shopping portal WorldSpy has pulled the plug on a rare Web freebie: no-charge, advertising-free Internet access. more »

Hacker compromised astronaut safety

The lives of space shuttle astronauts were put at risk by a computer hacker who overloaded Nasa's communication system in 1997. more »

The plans for Web-based software services

Microsoft unveiled its long-awaited vision for the future of computing and a new strategy for enabling its Windows software for the Web. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Microsoft brewing Java-like language

Microsoft unveiled a new, Java-like software programming language intended to simplify the building of Web services using its software. more »

Intel targets Crusoe with low-power notebook chips

Chip giant Intel unveiled five new notebook processors, including two low-power chips designed to compete against Transmeta's Crusoe. more »