
Hardware and Software Technician - IT Specialist (SYSANALYSIS)
Joint ActivitiesAbout the Position: This position is in the Defense Civilian Intelligence Personnel System (DCIPS). Employees occupying DCIPS positions are in the Excepted Service and must adhere to U.S. Code, Title 10, as well as Department of Defense Instruction 1400.25. These positions are located with the Joint Interagency Task Force South, U.S. Southern Command, Key West, FL, 33040 J6. To find out more about the area, please visit: https://www.cityofkeywest-fl.gov/ & https://www.monroecounty-fl.gov/Serves as a Hardware and Software Technician - IT Specialist (SYSANALYSIS) within the Directorate of Command, Control, Communications, Computers and Intelligence (C41) Systems, Joint Interagency Task Force South (JIATFS), Truman Annex, Key West, FL.Conduct information assurance activities on information systems such as application of security patches.Provide technical expertise on system operations, hardware, and a wide variety of applications and programs.Perform system administration duties on a large network of computers with wide area network access.Install application software for maintenance of system configuration files.
Opens the company's application page
Listed via
USAJobs
usajobs.gov
Similar roles
Design & Tech
Related reads from TCHNX

The Quiet Revolution in Local-First Software
As major platforms face outages and data breaches, a new generation of developers is building applications that prioritise local data storage and peer-to-peer sync, challenging the cloud-first orthodoxy that's dominated tech for two decades.

The Quiet Revolution in Edge AI: Why Your Next Computer Might Not Need the Cloud
As neural processing units become standard in consumer devices, we're witnessing a fundamental shift in how AI applications work. Local processing is no longer a fallback; it's becoming the preferred architecture.

The Rise of AI-Assisted Code Generation 2: Are Developers Becoming Prompt Engineers?
As AI coding assistants reshape software development, the industry grapples with a fundamental question: is writing code giving way to writing prompts? We examine how London's tech scene is adapting to this seismic shift.

