Last month as part of the Navy’s annual Trident Warrior exercise,Dataline, LLC successfully demonstrated that a standard shipboard communications infrastructure could be used to manage a commercial cloud infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) platform. Presented during the fall Trident Warrior ’10 (TW ’10) lab period,Dataline’s Secure Cloud Computing experimentused a simulated shipboard infrastructure to demonstrate secure access to selected collaboration and geospatial information service (GIS) applications.The purpose was to validate the ability of a commercial Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) platform to support Department of the Navy (DON) requirements for global connectivity, server failover and application access. For this portion of the exercise, Dataline used the Amazon EC2 IaaS platform. The experiment also used SecureParser® as part of theUnisys Stealth architecture to provide “data-in-motion” security. Applications used included Oracle Beehive, ERDAS Apollo and the Joint Forces Command (JFCOM) developed Transverse collaboration suite. LCDR Caroline Lahman, Officer-in-Charge Navy FORCEnet San Diego, was pleased with the results noting a desire to continue these cloud computing experiments as part of the spring lab period.
During a recent interview,Robert Carey, Navy Chief Information Officer, also stated that cloud computing offered real value to the Navy. Citing that both the Navy Next Generation Enterprise Network (NGEN) and Consolidated Afloat Networks and Enterprise Services (CANES) programs will leverage cloud computing, he envisioned a future day when “Grey clouds” within a ship’s hull would eventually transition to clouds within the battle group. The increased IT efficiency delivered through cloud computing would also enhance mission accomplishment by making more resources available for investment into naval mission platforms (ships and planes). Mr. Carey sees ready access to authoritative data from the cloud as an important enabler to a real-time/near real-time decision making process, saying that the cloud delivers the ability to have a ubiquitous computing environment and interoperability. After observing the experiment, SPAWAR representatives showed similar sentiments, saying that the Navy was actively considering the use of cloud computing technologies as part of itsNaval Networks Enterprise-2016strategy
Trident Warrior ’10 is scheduled to continue with a second lab period in the spring 2010 and an at sea demonstration period after that.
For further information on the Trident Warrior lab based experiments, please contact LCDR Caroline Lahman (caroline.lahman@navy.mil ).
Believe the Hype
-
2009 was a big year for Appistry and 2010 is showing even more promise as
enterprises begin to take greater advantage of the benefits of PaaS. But
enterpri...
Oracle, Sun and the Enterprise CTO
-
The CTOvision.com assessment of the Oracle Acquisition of Sun: This is
positive for the enterprise IT across the board, but the biggest determinate
of what...
Sharing Information to Support Haiti Relief Efforts
-
Palantir Technologies is contributing to the Haiti relief effort by
providing a public instance of Palantir to enable aid organizations to
easily access an...
Simon Moves On
-
One indulgent use of a personal blog is to drop a nod in the direction of a
salutary individual, and I’d like to do so for my departing boss, Jim Simon.
Ji...
(Membership information available at https://www.ncoic.org/join/ )
Today's Sponsor
Cloud Computing: A US DoD Survey
World Sumit of Cloud Computing, Ramat Gan, Israel
Cloud Computing Presentations
New to Cloud Computing? Look at these videos.
Loading...
About Me
Kevin Jackson
Manassas, Virginia, United States
Kevin L. Jackson is a senior information technologist specializing in information technology solutions that meet critical Federal
government operational requirements. Currently, he is an Engineering Fellow with NJVC.
1 comments:
Interesting to see Amazon Web Services and Amazon EC2 start to pennitrate DoD...
Post a Comment