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Practicing En Masse on the Open Sea
Sailors assigned to the USS Abraham Lincoln and USS Nimitz carrier strike groups had an uncommon training opportunity recently when they conducted a joint exercise in the waters near Southern California. Though carrier groups often operate together to respond to real-world events, disparate taskings and locations usually prevent combined rehearsals. But thanks to fortuitous schedules, the Lincoln and Nimitz assets were able to meet up in the vast Pacific, enabling personnel to combine resources in preparation for future mission requirements.
Digital Navy Poised to Set Sail
The U.S. Navy is steaming full speed toward attaining its dream of a digital force, but the most difficult part of the journey may lie just ahead. The sea service has its technological map, and its course has the endorsement of the top leadership. However, it must deal with a new set of challenges as its info-centric force evolves into a new form.
Navy Prepares to Take An Important First Step
It is the objective of the U.S. Navy’s Information Dominance Corps to manage a global network that delivers instant integration of military data across a number of separate specializations such as geographic, intelligence, logistics and manpower, as well as provide information about red or blue forces. The semantic Web will be the engine needed to power the effort.
Navy Delays Starting the NGEN
After 10 years of service, it is time to say goodbye to the Navy/Marine Corps Intranet—almost. The massive network serves more than 700,000 sailors, Marines and civilians and makes up about 70 percent of the total Navy information technology footprint ashore. It originally was supposed to finish its time with the Navy in early fall to make way for the Next Generation Enterprise Network. Instead, the sea service has extended the life of the Navy/Marine Corps Intranet and will spend $3.4 billion on a continuity-of-services contract to keep the network around for another 43 months.
Maneuver in the Global Commons—The Cyber Dimension
Much has been written about maneuver in various domains of conflict—land, sea and air. As in many other fields, the thinking owes much to the late Col. John Boyd, USAF, who is well known for his concept of the OODA loop (observe, orient, decide, act), and who contributed materially to thinking about maneuver warfare vice attrition warfare.
Information Security Organization Extends International Reach
(ISC)2 has created an application security advisory board that includes information professionals from the Asia-Pacific region, Europe and the Americas. The board will recommend ways to increase awareness of software that is not secure and help software developers understand how to introduce security directly at the software development level.
Bromberg Promoted, Assigned New FORSCOM Billet
Maj. Gen. Howard B.
Multiple Vendors Support U.S. Air Force Engineering Integration
Booz Allen Hamilton Incorporated, McLean, Virginia; CACI Enterprise Solutions Incorporated, Chantilly; Virginia, Deloitte Consulting, Alexandria, Virginia; Dynamics Research Corporation, Andover, Mass
U.S. Air Force Extends Battlefield Airborne Communications Node Contract
Northrop Grumman Information Systems, San Diego, California, was awarded a $34 million contract modification, which will provide for an extension on the maintenance and support of the Battlefield Airb