Lockheed Martin 2002 Annual Report Download - page 13

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SERVING THE PUBLIC GOOD
A government that serves the governed. A government by and for the people. These are the pillars of a democracy where
the rule of law is guaranteed by a Constitution forged in the battle for independence and freedom. These are values that
have not changed—through war, depression, or at the peak of triumph.
But solutions to government challenges can and do change with 21st century technology that moves at the speed of a
mouse click. Managing large sources of data, integrating complex IT systems, as well as bringing to bear the talents
of 12 software maturity level-5 and level-4 companies, Lockheed Martin is well positioned to serve and assist federal
agencies accomplish their nationally consequential missions by:
MANAGING LARGE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INFRASTRUCTURES
APPLYING SYSTEMS INTEGRATION CAPABILITIES TO DELIVER
VITAL SERVICES TO MILLIONS OF CITIZENS
PROVIDING INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGIES TO RAISE EFFICIENCY,
MODERNIZE AND REDUCE COSTS
Lockheed Martin technologies are responsible for managing over 60 percent of the world’s air traffic. In 2002, the
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) selected Lockheed Martin for the next-generation En Route Automation
Modernization (ERAM), an evolutionary infrastructure upgrade of the current en route air traffic control automation
system. The system is used at the 21 FAA Air Route Traffic Control Centers to control high-altitude aircraft. ERAM
will upgrade the National Airspace System software and will provide the FAA with enhanced automation features to
accommodate increases in air traffic.
As a systems integrator serving a broad range of federal agencies, Lockheed Martin technologies are instrumental in
delivering 35 million Social Security checks every month; helping a million families a year become homeowners
through Fannie Mae; assisting the U.S. Postal Service sort and manage millions of letters and packages a day with
improved accuracy and speed; supporting the FDIC’s commitment to insure deposits at approximately 9,700 banks, and
savings and loan associations; providing information technology to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
so benefits are delivered with greater speed and efficiency; and assisting inventors patent their discoveries through
linked computer networks at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
Previous Spread: The U.S. Postal Service Uses Lockheed Martin Automation Technologies to Move More Than 200 Billion Pieces of Mail a Year
Efficiently, Accurately and Safely. Facing Page: Air Traffic Control (Top), Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification System (IAFIS) (Middle Left),
The Binary Code Is Key to Information Technology (Bottom Left), Applying Systems Integration Capabilities to Deliver Vital Services (Bottom Right)
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