Solving challenging problems with the right expertise.
Our software development process focuses on the intersection of people, technology, and work; uncovering complexity and creating effective human-machine teams to address our client’s most significant challenges.
Mile 2 builds custom software tools across all levels of maturity that help our customers meet their objectives more effectively. Our customers approach us with challenging problems and tools that only partially accomplish what they want. We excel at serving customers that must have more tailored software support capabilities to achieve and exceed their current capability; to keep pace with an ever more complex work environment.
Decision Support Case Studies
Medusa
Medusa is a pillar joining the Fusion base defense management software portfolio, focusing specifically on the detection and apprehension of cUAS within a given area of observation.
Medusa is for a Battle Station setting with 1-2 operators, interacting with their surveillance equipment and other teams to manage surveillance and response to drones. The operators Face High Cognitive Workloads as a result of attempting to manage multiple devices and capabilities and coordinate them with multiple, possibly moving
targets that may be rapidly changing in priority.
ACE Platform
The self-service platform for developing and operationalizing artificial intelligence and machine learning algorithms for the Air Force.
The Air Force Cognitive Engine (ACE) provides people who need AI or ML access to the right algorithms, the data to solve operational needs, and the right compute resources to effectively solve their problems. ACE Hub provides subject matter experts efficient self-service provisioning of interactive development environments for exploratory data analysis. The ACE Catalog provides robust, versioned storage for models and data.
Tech Gauge
A technology and manufacturing readiness calculator that helps teams establish an accurate baseline for maturity and design a roadmap for moving their technology from inception to commercialization.
Calculating technology readiness level (TRL) and manufacturing readiness level (MRL) values is one way businesses can assess the maturity of their technologies—in fact, most government agencies require TRL/MRL scores in proposals. The problem is, the criteria for determining these values can be confusing, impacting the accuracy and reliability of the scores.