Tuesday, August 3, 2010

D2 TEAM-Sim to speak at 10th Annual ADL Co-Lab ImplementationFest

Orlando, FL - D2 TEAM-Sim will be speaking at this year's ImplementationFest, hosted by the ADL Co-Lab. James Cimino, Sr. Program Manager for D2 TEAM-Sim will be speaking on Thursday, August 12th, about "Launcher Dogs: March Order and Emplace". The game "Launcher Dogs: March Order and Emplace" is the solution developed by D2 TEAM-Sim that won an "Innovations in DoD Gamining" award at GameTech 2010. D2 TEAM-Sim will also be exhibiting at ImplementationFest, and will be showcasing the "Launcher Dogs: March Order and Emplace" solution, along with other examples of our innovative PC and mobile training products and solutions.

ImplementationFest is the premier event for the DoD training community hosted by the OSD Advanced Distributed Learning Initiative. It provides an opportunity to a unique gathering of military, government, industry, and academic learning/education/training professionals to share lessons learned. The conference focuses on a range of topics including effective use of distributed learning technologies for DoD training, training standards and specifications, innovative learning capabilities, and other ADL topics.

Monday, August 2, 2010

Yee-Haw!! D2 TEAM-Sim participates in the CSDA Rodeo!

FORT BLISS, Texas - The Army Capabilities Integration Center (ARCIC), a Directorate of the U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC), hosted the "Connecting Soldiers to Digital Applications (CSDA)" Digital Rodeo at Fort Bliss on July 28 - 29th. The Digital Rodeo is intended to showcase industry "Best of Breed" technology with the potential to provide new mobile tools to Soldiers via CSDA.

D2 TEAM-Sim demonstrated our innovative training solutions which leverage commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) gaming solutions, for the PC, Apple iPhone, iPod and on the iPad. D2 TEAM-Sim was demonstrating these capabilities in the Raytheon CSDA booth. The D2 TEAM-Sim solution is part of the CSDA Phase 1 pilots.

The CSDA program was initiated in September 2009 and involves soldiers in the Army Evaluation Task Force (AETF) who are testing smart phone technology in different scenarios, including intelligence gathering on the battlefield. The program will fundamentally change the way soldiers access knowledge, information and communications in order to create a persistent learning environment without regard to where they are serving.