Adapting industry practices for a Trusted COP supporting agile command and control in Fleet Battle Management

Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited === Navy leadership has articulated interest in understanding game changing technologies that permit employment of network centric (versus platform centric) battle management. To explore this problem statement, the project team employed a model-...

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Main Authors: Hall, Stewart, Roa, Steven, DeJesus, Fernando, Gray, Roger, McCoy, Benjamin, Rashed, Nazila, Shirley, James, Siordia, Antonio, Wolf, Adam, Wood, Charles
Other Authors: Systems Engineering
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/6956
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-69562015-08-06T16:02:48Z Adapting industry practices for a Trusted COP supporting agile command and control in Fleet Battle Management Hall, Stewart Roa, Steven DeJesus, Fernando Gray, Roger McCoy, Benjamin Rashed, Nazila Shirley, James Siordia, Antonio Wolf, Adam Wood, Charles Systems Engineering Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited Navy leadership has articulated interest in understanding game changing technologies that permit employment of network centric (versus platform centric) battle management. To explore this problem statement, the project team employed a model-based systems engineering approach to examine segments of both the operational and physical networking and communication architectures. Various alternatives were explored with the intent in making recommendations for technology investment by the U.S. Navy. Research conducted by the project team on industry analogues shows that financial industry also relies on network technology as well as operational architecture to effectively execute transactions valued at trillions of dollars daily on a global scale. Global banking systems employ a "Clearing House" approach that settles critical transactions quickly and "keeps track" of all transactions. This allows Banks to quickly understand debits and credits and minimize liquidity risk. Re-thinking conventional data management into a structure that address "mission risk" as key metric may allow alternative architectures to be employed for fleet battle management. The project team's research and modeling showed that while communications and network technologies may offer improvement, game changing approaches would more likely emerge as a result from rethinking organizational communication architectures. 2012-05-29T17:19:55Z 2012-05-29T17:19:55Z 2010-12 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/6956 NPS-SE-10-010 This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. As such, it is in the public domain, and under the provisions of Title 17, United States Code, Section 105, it may not be copyrighted. Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
description Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited === Navy leadership has articulated interest in understanding game changing technologies that permit employment of network centric (versus platform centric) battle management. To explore this problem statement, the project team employed a model-based systems engineering approach to examine segments of both the operational and physical networking and communication architectures. Various alternatives were explored with the intent in making recommendations for technology investment by the U.S. Navy. Research conducted by the project team on industry analogues shows that financial industry also relies on network technology as well as operational architecture to effectively execute transactions valued at trillions of dollars daily on a global scale. Global banking systems employ a "Clearing House" approach that settles critical transactions quickly and "keeps track" of all transactions. This allows Banks to quickly understand debits and credits and minimize liquidity risk. Re-thinking conventional data management into a structure that address "mission risk" as key metric may allow alternative architectures to be employed for fleet battle management. The project team's research and modeling showed that while communications and network technologies may offer improvement, game changing approaches would more likely emerge as a result from rethinking organizational communication architectures.
author2 Systems Engineering
author_facet Systems Engineering
Hall, Stewart
Roa, Steven
DeJesus, Fernando
Gray, Roger
McCoy, Benjamin
Rashed, Nazila
Shirley, James
Siordia, Antonio
Wolf, Adam
Wood, Charles
author Hall, Stewart
Roa, Steven
DeJesus, Fernando
Gray, Roger
McCoy, Benjamin
Rashed, Nazila
Shirley, James
Siordia, Antonio
Wolf, Adam
Wood, Charles
spellingShingle Hall, Stewart
Roa, Steven
DeJesus, Fernando
Gray, Roger
McCoy, Benjamin
Rashed, Nazila
Shirley, James
Siordia, Antonio
Wolf, Adam
Wood, Charles
Adapting industry practices for a Trusted COP supporting agile command and control in Fleet Battle Management
author_sort Hall, Stewart
title Adapting industry practices for a Trusted COP supporting agile command and control in Fleet Battle Management
title_short Adapting industry practices for a Trusted COP supporting agile command and control in Fleet Battle Management
title_full Adapting industry practices for a Trusted COP supporting agile command and control in Fleet Battle Management
title_fullStr Adapting industry practices for a Trusted COP supporting agile command and control in Fleet Battle Management
title_full_unstemmed Adapting industry practices for a Trusted COP supporting agile command and control in Fleet Battle Management
title_sort adapting industry practices for a trusted cop supporting agile command and control in fleet battle management
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/6956
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