How Virtual Technology Can Impact Total Ownership Costs on a USN Vessel

This thesis investigates the development of virtual technology and how the Consolidated Afloat Network Enterprise Services (CANES) program can reduce Total Cost of Ownership when a ships local area networks are upgraded. With the recent development of cloud computing technologies, everyone from Fort...

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Main Author: Boothe, BJ S.
Other Authors: Cook, Glenn R.
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/6771
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-67712015-08-30T16:00:51Z How Virtual Technology Can Impact Total Ownership Costs on a USN Vessel Boothe, BJ S. Cook, Glenn R. Barreto, Alberto, III Information Systems and Operations This thesis investigates the development of virtual technology and how the Consolidated Afloat Network Enterprise Services (CANES) program can reduce Total Cost of Ownership when a ships local area networks are upgraded. With the recent development of cloud computing technologies, everyone from Fortune 500 companies to defense organizations believes that there are tangible benefits to moving operations to the cloud. This idea is particularly resonant with Naval Surface operations, consistent with the downsizing of personnel on surface ships, and with the Chief of Naval Operations vision for information systems to be agile, relevant, and cost effective. By building a scalable private cloud model that utilizes a centralized server for computer processing, thin client workstations were compared to current thick client architectures onboard surface vessels. With multicore server processors developed to handle several tasks simultaneously, the ability to consolidate and virtualize multiple servers and workstations aboard naval vessels is now possible from a blade server chassis. By consolidating the computer processing into a central location, total ship energy consumption could be reduced by31 kilowatts during peak usage. The reduced shipboard energy consumption cut shore power costs by $3.75 per hour and reduced fuel consumption by 2,400 gallons each operating quarter for a ship using Ships Service Gas Turbine Generators (SSGTG). Even with increased research and developments costs associated with the virtualization software, a ships network becomes agile and elastic while reducing overall energy consumption. 2012-05-14T18:55:35Z 2012-05-14T18:55:35Z 2012-03 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/6771 Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
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description This thesis investigates the development of virtual technology and how the Consolidated Afloat Network Enterprise Services (CANES) program can reduce Total Cost of Ownership when a ships local area networks are upgraded. With the recent development of cloud computing technologies, everyone from Fortune 500 companies to defense organizations believes that there are tangible benefits to moving operations to the cloud. This idea is particularly resonant with Naval Surface operations, consistent with the downsizing of personnel on surface ships, and with the Chief of Naval Operations vision for information systems to be agile, relevant, and cost effective. By building a scalable private cloud model that utilizes a centralized server for computer processing, thin client workstations were compared to current thick client architectures onboard surface vessels. With multicore server processors developed to handle several tasks simultaneously, the ability to consolidate and virtualize multiple servers and workstations aboard naval vessels is now possible from a blade server chassis. By consolidating the computer processing into a central location, total ship energy consumption could be reduced by31 kilowatts during peak usage. The reduced shipboard energy consumption cut shore power costs by $3.75 per hour and reduced fuel consumption by 2,400 gallons each operating quarter for a ship using Ships Service Gas Turbine Generators (SSGTG). Even with increased research and developments costs associated with the virtualization software, a ships network becomes agile and elastic while reducing overall energy consumption.
author2 Cook, Glenn R.
author_facet Cook, Glenn R.
Boothe, BJ S.
author Boothe, BJ S.
spellingShingle Boothe, BJ S.
How Virtual Technology Can Impact Total Ownership Costs on a USN Vessel
author_sort Boothe, BJ S.
title How Virtual Technology Can Impact Total Ownership Costs on a USN Vessel
title_short How Virtual Technology Can Impact Total Ownership Costs on a USN Vessel
title_full How Virtual Technology Can Impact Total Ownership Costs on a USN Vessel
title_fullStr How Virtual Technology Can Impact Total Ownership Costs on a USN Vessel
title_full_unstemmed How Virtual Technology Can Impact Total Ownership Costs on a USN Vessel
title_sort how virtual technology can impact total ownership costs on a usn vessel
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/6771
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