GEOINT Symposium
In Friday’s Government Hub panel, NGA Moonshot: How It All Comes Together, several leaders involved in the Moonshot effort were on hand to promote capabilities, management and support for the mission.
The new face of GEOINT is fresh, full of energy, and adept at identifying the industry’s top problems. With a fierce attitude of openness and collaboration, this new guard of startups and entrepreneurs is already at work developing solutions.
In the area of diversity and inclusion, tech and government—and therefore GEOINT—have room to grow. During the final main-stage panel at GEOINT 2021, diversity advocates and experts discussed how to stimulate change.
There is a ton of data and work being done to address climate change by many organizations, both civilian and government. But this data will only matter if it’s shared and communicated correctly to an audience that understands the true crisis we’re in.
Whether you’re talking about trucks or tradecraft, it’s not enough to be shiny and new; what really matters is what’s happening under the hood.
Not sure what exactly the “metaverse” is? Neither are many of the professionals working on it today. Three of the field’s top actors hash out what the concept means to them, and how they see it unfolding over the next 50 years.
The GEOINT community and universities can build valuable relationships by fostering cross-pollination of knowledge, resources, talent, and vision.
Although the U.S. military is united in its mission, it’s divided in its technology. With the help of GEOINT, DoD’s JADC2 concept will close the digital gaps between military services, as well as allied nations. An expert panel at GEOINT 2021 explained how.
Director Christopher Scolese details how the NRO is tackling the competitive space market and what’s needed in the years to come.
On Thursday afternoon, Aimee McGranahan moderated a panel focused on turning the innovations that have been discussed throughout the symposium into reality to support the war fighter and intelligence community.