Official Site of the U.S. Air Force   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

News > Department officials seek balanced 'cloud' computing solution
Department officials seek balanced 'cloud' computing solution

Posted 9/8/2011 Email story   Print story

    


by Lisa Daniel
American Forces Press Service


9/8/2011 - ARLINGTON, Va. (AFNS) -- Defense Department officials are looking to balance efficiency, effectiveness and security while moving away from the department's decentralized network of computer servers and data centers and into "cloud" computing, the DOD's deputy chief information officer said Sept. 7.

"We must balance all three," said Robert J. Carey, who is also the deputy assistant secretary of defense for information management, integration and technology. "We have to serve the information needs of our warfighters, as well as the people back here in the ivory towers."

Carey, who is also a Naval Reserve captain, spoke at the Defense Systems Summit 2011, an information technology conference held here. He told the audience, made up largely of defense contractors, that budget restrictions and the need for better efficiency is driving the department and military services to move toward cloud computing, which provides an Internet-based forum for information to be pooled among many users.

The Federal Chief Information Officers Council has charged the government with leveraging cloud computing services to reduce costs and provide greater efficiencies, according to the U.S. CIO council website. Cloud computing allows customers to scale capacity on demand and greatly reduces energy consumption.

"Stovepipe solutions ... cannot be afforded any more," Carey said. "That is not going to happen. We are hacking through some of the challenges of employing this technology."

Some of those challenges, he said, are how to operate securely in a commercial, rather than a government, setting; giving U.S. Cyber Command members the ability to identify and respond to emergencies; and determining who manages the data in real time.

The department has many cloud-computer pilot programs, and has ramped up its standardization and consolidation of its computer infrastructure, such as servers, data centers and security architecture, Carey said. The department's data centers are being used at less than 15 percent of capacity.

Officials are determining which information, based on importance and security needs, should be consolidated in core data centers, Carey said. The department plans to release initial guidance this fall on a strategy to maximize data centers at 75 percent capacity.

The military services have led the consolidation effort, he added, and the department will follow.

"We're not interested in creating new standards and making (the services) change," Carey said. Rather, Pentagon officials will use the services' best practices to formulate implementation throughout the Defense Department.

"If someone has cracked the code, we're all over it," he said, noting that other agencies, such as the General Services Administration, have had "tremendous successes, but also some challenges" in converting to cloud computing.

A typical military installation may serve 50,000 users, Carey told the audience. "That makes our world complex," he said, "and everything needs to be thought through well."



tabComments
No comments yet.  
Add a comment

 Inside AF.mil

ima cornerSearch

tabSubscribe AF.MIL
tabMore HeadlinesRSS feed 
PHOTO ESSAY: Airmen join coalition forces in EOD mission

A family affair: Former base now home to burrowing owl family  3

July/August Airman magazine now available

Air Force Week in Photos

B-52s to receive communications upgrade  1

Academy cadets deploy, experience expeditionary life   5

AF aerial firefighters continue to battle West Fork Complex fire

Air Force announces preferred alternative for security forces regional training center consolidation  2

CSAF to sponsor 3 captains for PhD program  1

Davis-Monthan Airmen work to end veteran homelessness by 2015

Jennies to jets to stealth: Bomb wing turns 90

Concentration camp survivor to fighter pilot: 'Freedom a beautiful thing'  6

Wounded warriors adapt, overcome at Andrews sports camp

Pilots, combat systems officers may be eligible for retention incentives   8

tabCommentaryRSS feed 
Our commitment, our community

'Lucky' people take personal responsibility for their own success  16


Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     USA.gov     Security and Privacy notice     E-publishing  
Suicide Prevention      Sexual Assault Awareness & Prevention     FOIA     IG   EEO