Military Embedded Systems

Company Directory

LDRA Technology

2540 King Arthur Blvd, Suite #228
Lewisville, TX 75056
[email protected]
https://ldra.com/
LDRA Technology
Articles related to LDRA Technology
Cyber

Net-centric security and CWE - Story

September 04, 2012
The Common Weakness Enumeration (CWE) lists the common-mode failures that have led to security breaches in numerous software systems. It can be used to help improve the robustness of critical networks and infrastructure to help thwart cyber attacks.
Avionics

DO-178C brings modern technology to safety-critical software development - Story

March 07, 2012
Avionics software technology has improved by leaps and bounds since DO-178B was introduced in 1992. DO-178C will bring safety-critical software development into the modern era, adding support for advanced techniques such as UML and mathematical modeling, object-oriented programming, and formal methods. The ready availability of third-party tools, platforms, and certification services will hasten the adoption and deployment of DO-178C.
Avionics

Fixed price avionics certification solution offered by LDRA - News

March 01, 2012
NUREMBERG, Germany. Officials at LDRA created fixed price services group for avionics DO-178B/C and DO-254 certification. The new LDRA division -- LDRA Certification Services (LCS) -- was announced this week at the Embedded World show in Nuremberg, Germany.
Cyber

Software tool suite achieves Homeland Security compatibility - Product

June 22, 2011
In this age of Internet-connected everything, software becomes increasingly vulnerable to security breaches. However, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's National Cyber Security Division and the nonprofit MITRE Corporation have created and manage the Common Weakness Enumeration (CWE) Compatibility achievement just earned by LDRA for LDRA?s tool suite.
Avionics

When code is born of old: Architectural obsolescence within the development life cycle - Story

April 11, 2011
Portability is not just relevant to software migration during the lifetime of a product. In complex military projects where the development cycle can easily take up to 10 years, software might have to be ported to new architectures two or three times. Unless specific steps are taken to ensure platform portability, such migration accelerates project overage, extending work schedules right through testing and verification. The ideal would be to anticipate such an occurrence and plan to minimize its impact, but the right software test tools can smooth the way even when porting legacy code written without such foresight.
Avionics

When code is born of old: Architectural obsolescence within the development life cycle - Story

April 11, 2011
Portability is not just relevant to software migration during the lifetime of a product. In complex military projects where the development cycle can easily take up to 10 years, software might have to be ported to new architectures two or three times. Unless specific steps are taken to ensure platform portability, such migration accelerates project overage, extending work schedules right through testing and verification. The ideal would be to anticipate such an occurrence and plan to minimize its impact, but the right software test tools can smooth the way even when porting legacy code written without such foresight.
Avionics

Legacy x86 code reaches modern standards - Product

February 04, 2011
As new certification standards arise in the avionics, industrial control, and other industries, legacy x86 applications are required to recertify.