Military logistics software
Articles on military logistics: last-tactical-mile visibility, defense ERP integration, sustainment dashboards, fleet and medical logistics.
Military logistics software must track assets across classification boundaries, support disconnected operation in the field, and integrate with C2 systems that were not designed with supply chain visibility in mind. The challenge is building systems that remain useful when connectivity fails, manage cold-chain requirements for medical supplies, and support autonomous resupply as unmanned platforms enter the logistics chain. Articles here cover military inventory management, resupply automation, and logistics software architecture.
7 articles in this topic, drawn from logistics.
Articles tagged "Military Logistics Software" are written by Corvus Intelligence engineers who build defense software for NATO and government organizations. About the team →
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Frequently Asked Questions
+What is military logistics software and how does it differ from commercial?
Military logistics software tracks personnel, materiel, ammunition, fuel, and medical supplies across echelons under conditions commercial systems never see: jammed GPS, intermittent comms, mixed-classification data, and coalition partners. It must work offline, sync over low-bandwidth links, and integrate with NATO standards like LOGFAS and STANAG 4677.
+How does real-time fleet management work for military vehicles?
Vehicles report position, fuel, maintenance state, and crew status over SATCOM, LTE, or mesh radio to a central operating picture. Modern systems store events locally when comms drop and replay them on reconnect, so the headquarters view is consistent even after hours of denied connectivity.
+What is RFID asset tracking and where is it used in defense?
RFID asset tracking uses passive or active tags scanned at chokepoints (gates, containers, aircraft loading) to log custody changes without manual entry. Defense uses it for ammunition lots, weapons accountability, sensitive items inventory, and in-transit visibility for unit moves across theaters.
+How is medical logistics handled in a battlefield environment?
Medical logistics covers blood products, pharmaceuticals, oxygen, and Class VIII consumables with cold-chain and expiration tracking. Field systems capture casualty data (TCCC card, MIST report) at point of injury and propagate it forward to Role 2 and Role 3 facilities so receiving teams have full context before the casualty arrives.
+What standards govern interoperable logistics data in NATO operations?
NATO logistics interoperability is built on STANAGs: STANAG 2406 for logistics doctrine, STANAG 4677 for dismounted soldier systems messaging, and the LOGFAS suite (ADAMS, LOGREP, EVE) for movement and consumption reporting. Coalition logistics software must read and write these formats natively.