ARMY DATA: FROM THE FOXHOLE TO THE PENTAGON
3WHAT WOULD BE A SUCCESS STORY FOR PEO EIS, IN TERMS OF DATA?
The end user.
Smith: “To me, the success is all about the end user, the operator: if we can get them the data they need, in the time they need it, to allow them to make the right deci- sions, whatever that may be—medical, operational, maintenance.”
POSSIBILITIES AT YOUR FINGERTIPS 5
IPPS-A’s mobile capabilities provide all Soldiers access to their Army personnel record without requiring a common access card for authentication. Soldiers can submit help inquiries, request updates to their record, and monitor the status of their personnel actions from a mobile phone or tablet. (Photo courtesy of PEO EIS)
WHAT ARE YOUR RECENT WINS? Smith:
We are rolling out the Integrated Personnel and Pay System – Army (IPPS-A), the Army’s new comprehensive human resources system that has subsumed the Standard Installation and Division Personnel Reporting System.
Te Project Manager for Defensive Cyber Operations opened “the Forge,” a facility designed to foster collaboration among Army IT, academia and industry partners that allows cyber troops to test emerging technologies to address cyber threats. “When I saw the world-class development of the Forge, three words came to mind: speed, agility and invention,” said Lt. Gen. Stephen G. Fogarty, commanding general of U.S. Army Cyber Command.
Our Allied Information Technology program celebrated a major milestone on March 12. Armed Forces Ukraine, along with Allied Information Technology, hosted the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitch; Ukraine’s deputy minister of defense, Oleg Shevchuk; and the chief of defense forces, Viktor Muzhenko, at a ceremony commemorating the transition of responsibility for various mission command, cybersecurity and defense business system capabilities valued at nearly $25 million. Tese assets have been implemented by Army IT in
Ukraine, under the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative over the past three years.
In only eight months, the Project Manager for Defensive Cyber Operations has developed and fielded a prototype deployable defensive cyber system that can be easily transported in the overhead storage compartment of a commercial airline. Tis is a vast improvement over the larger systems used previously, and enables much faster deployment with better flexibility and capability.
In conjunction with the U.S. Army Communications- Electronics Command, PEO EIS is fielding the Inflatable Satellite Antenna on the Korean peninsula. Te antenna is a versatile, lightweight improvement to an existing mobile satel- lite dish (the Combat Service Support Very Small Aperture Terminal), and is easier to move, faster to set up and provides more flexibility to operators. (For more information, see the Faces of the Force profile of Capt. Zachary Schofield, Page 114.)
We are addressing the Army’s data problem through our Army Leader Dashboard initiative, providing a way for senior lead- ers to access and visualize the Army’s troves of data. (For more information, see “Creating Insight-Driven Decisions,” Page 14.)
https://asc.ar my.mil
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