Archive for March, 2009

Packetrat Podcast – NGEN Industry Day

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

For those of you who like journalism in the raw — including my apparent inability to put together cohesive questions on the fly — here’s the press availability with Admiral Bill Goodwin, the director of the NGEN System Program Office and Asst, CNO for Next Generation Enterprise Networks Program Office; Dr. John Gauss, Acquisition division head of NGEN SPO; and Captain Tim Holland, the program manager for NGEN.
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Click here to download (WMA, 10 MB)

I am not Paige Atkins

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

Despite the byline, the words in this story belong to Paige Atkins, director of the Defense Spectrum Organization. Despite several attempts to get someone to change the way the story looks online so that Paige’s words — which she spoke during an interview with me–are actually attributed to Paige, my byline is still on the story.

I got a chance after the interview to meet Ms. Atkins in person at the Software Radio Summit. She’s in the driver’s seat behind an ambitious vision for defense communications–dynamic spectrum management through the use of cognitive radio and other technologies to allow access to spectrum anywhere under any conditions. But I’ll let her tell you about it.

Navy’s NGEN schedule requires an NMCI holding pattern

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

At today’s Navy Next Generation Enterprise Network (NGEN) Industry Day in DC, the Navy NGEN program team announced that the holders of the Navy’s current intranet program contract,Hewlett-Packard’s EDS, would be approached with a single-source contract to continue to maintain their outsourced Navy Marine Corps Intranet (NMCI) while the Navy continues with the herculean task of getting a whole new network procurement program in place.

The NMCI contract expires in September of 2010. At current projections, because of the size and required oversight for the NGEN contract, NGEN won’t be ready to begin deployment until at least mid-2011. And there’s the small matter of being able to migrate from NMCI, the infrastructure of which is owned by EDS.

So, to bridge the gap, the Navy announced that it would be working with EDS to award them a sole-source contract to continue to support the network for the expected transition period — which is expected to last about 28 months after the contract start. The contract will also include terms by which the government will have continued access to the network during the transition, and obtain a government-use license for all of the intellectual property required for NGEN-bidders to figure out how to connect to NMCI.

March 2009 clips

Monday, March 30th, 2009

For Defense Systems:

For InternetNews.com:

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-03-29

Sunday, March 29th, 2009
  • I’m working on stories about veterans transitioning to civilian job market, at-rest encryption, geospatial intel, xml, & a monitor review. #
  • If you see pieces of my brain flying by, see my last post and you’ll know why. #

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On tap: Interviews with DISA’s John Garing and Tony Montemarano

Monday, March 16th, 2009

I’ll be meandering down to Arlington today to the Defense Information Systems Agency for an interview with DISA’s CIO, John Garing, and then will be speaking with DISA’s Component Acquisition Executive, Tony Montemarano. Topics on tap for Mr. Garing: cloud computing and DISA’s open-source initiative, Forge.mil. And I’ll be asking Mr. Montemarano about the focus of the new administration on “fixing” procurement, and how the innovations in acquisition programs started during Lt Gen Croom’s watch might be expanded or modified to meet the demands for better, faster, and cheaper acquisitions. I’m hoping to talk with him the “two-button” approach to Net-Centric Enterprise Services and the “third” button planned for the next iteration of the collaboration program; the “adopt” approach taken with NECC and DKO; and how those can be applied broadly to procurement at DISA.

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-03-15

Sunday, March 15th, 2009
  • Human terrain story filed and filed and filed. And there’s a real slam against HTS in Military Review. #
  • Marine Major Ben Connable in Military Review on Human Terrain System (HTS): “All our eggs in a broken basket” http://bit.ly/tNOHt #
  • I’m not at FOSE this week-too many other things today. It would be nice if someone posted the Kundra keynote for folks stuck working. #
  • So, did the FBI raid the CTO office in DC because they knew Kumar was at FOSE and wouldn’t be there? #
  • RT @SBFirst100Days: Tech nominee’s office targeted in bribery sting: http://is.gd/n4mj #

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Is HTS headed for end-of-lifecycle?

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

I’ve filed my story on the Human Terrain System–I’ll link to it when it’s published. But I filed just as some interesting related news popped up. The Wired Danger Room blog reported on a Military Review article by Marine Corps Major Ben Connable, former lead on the Marine Corps’ Cultural Intelligence Program, which ripped into HTS as:

…a quick-fix layer of social science expertise and contracted reachback capability to combatant staffs. This “build a new empire” proposal is based on the assumption that staffs are generally incapable of solving complex cultural problems on their own. The HTS approach is inconsistent with standing doctrine and ignores recent
improvements in military cultural capabilities.

This may be, as someone commented on Danger Room, an interesting example of interservice rivalry. But it’s also a sign that some in DOD agree there’s questionable utility in sending social scientists out into the field in camouflage, undertaking operations that would otherwise fall under the realm of Civil Affairs. Interestingly enough, the MAP-HT system that’s being developed by the Army’s CERDEC was demonstrated to the Army’s Civilian Affairs and Psychological Operations Command as well, and they’re in line to get the same gear. CAPOC also has access to the TIGR collection gear already.

So, the question is, will the HTS program fade away, or fade into background as a supporting element of CAPOC ops, or will it continue?

Dan Wolfe, the technical director for the HTS program, has a grand vision of integrating all of the sources of human terrain data into an HTS knowledge management center down at Oyster Point in Newport News, using the facilities built for the Joint IED Defeat Organization. And work is underway to create the Subject-Matter Expert network (SMEnet). If that vision is realized, HTS may become institutionalized within DOD, either with or without the HTTs, as a clearinghouse for all human terrain knowledge.

But how long a life does JIEDDO have?

Also, the Associated Press has begun a series on Michael Bhatia, a Human Terrain Team member who died in Khost Province, Afghanistan. Three HTT members have died since the HTTs were deployed starting in 2007. The article by Adam Geller is a deep dive into the life of the HTS.

On a side note, I heard back from Dr. William Stuart at UMd — see the updated post–and he corrected some of the interpretations I made of what he said. (Thanks, Bill–open source and peer review’s one of the advantage of open journalism practices.)

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-03-08

Sunday, March 8th, 2009
  • Interesting day. I interviewed the technology director for the Human Terrain System program, and a vice president at BAE about the program. #
  • And yes, C4ISR Journal is a magazine. #
  • I am not writing about basketball shoes. #
  • Headed to the Dropkick Murphys concert with my son–a Christmas gift from him. Seems a little self-serving, but who am I to complain? :) #

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DC CTO to be White House CIO

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

Just reported for Internetnews :

DC CTO named as Obama Administration’s CIO

The Obama administration has named Vivek Kundra to be the the first-ever White House-level chief information officer.

Kundra is currently chief technology officer for Washington, DC’s city government, and has risen in the public eye because of his innovative approaches to managing the city’s technology projects. As the first-ever Federal Chief Information Officer, he’ll be responsible for managing the entire federal government’s technology portfolio and budget, and overseeing its enterprise architecture.

I’ll link when the story is live.