Hidden Level’s corporate office is located at 1014 N. Geddes St. in Syracuse.
“Being selected for APFIT funding is a huge vote of confidence by the DOD in our technology,” Jeff Cole, CEO of Hidden Level, said. “We have always been confident in our capabilities, but this win is recognition that our technology can rapidly fill a significant gap in warfighting needs.”
The APFIT pilot program will transition technologies from development into production and accelerate the fielding of those technologies to the warfighter, the company said. Hidden Level’s technology will provide tactical passive radar for counter unmanned air systems (UAS) for the U.S. Army.
(Sponsored)

Ask the Expert: How Registered Apprenticeship Can Solve Employers’ Workforce Challenges
In today’s competitive labor market, employers face growing challenges: finding skilled workers, retaining top talent, and preparing for rapid technological change. Traditional hiring methods alone aren’t keeping up. That’s where

House of Representatives Passes $78 Billion Tax Package
On January 31, the House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed the Tax Relief for American Families and Workers Act of 2024, a tax package worth $78 billion. The bill was approved
APFIT funding will help deliver “war-winning capability” a year or two earlier than scheduled while “contributing to the health” of the U.S. industrial base through investments in small businesses or nontraditional defense-developed capabilities, Hidden Level said.
Given $150 million by Congress in 2023, the National Defense Authorization Act of fiscal year 2022 was created as a merit-based, competitive program for “innovative and mature” technologies and products to meet warfighter demands that “lack the necessary funding to field,” per the firm’s announcement.


