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Author DeLuca, Paul.

Title Assessing Aegis program transition to an open-architecture model / Paul DeLuca, Joel B. Predd, Michael Nixon, Irv Blickstein, Robert W. Button, James G. Kallimani, Shane Tierney.

Publication Info. Santa Monica, California : RAND, [2013]
©2013

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe JSTOR Open Ebooks  Electronic Book    ---  Available
Description 1 online resource (xxviii, 98 pages) : color illustrations
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
text file
PDF
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 95-96).
Contents Introduction. -- The IWS business model for Aegis acquisition. -- Aegis and the Aegis enterprise. -- Impact of the IWS business model and implementation choices on the fleet. -- Implications for the Aegis enterprise. -- Risks. -- Lessons learned from ARCI and SSDS. -- Conclusions and recommendations.
Summary Aegis is a highly integrated U.S. Navy combat system with anti-air warfare, ballistic missile defense, surface, subsurface, and strike roles that is currently operating on 84 ships. To reduce the costs of maintaining the system, and to take advantage of rapidly evolving commercial computing technology, the Navy is moving Aegis toward open-architecture software, a common source code library, and commercial, off-the-shelf processors. As it moves forward in implementing its integrated weapon system (IWS) model for the development, integration, and testing of upgrades to the Aegis weapon system, the Navy must consider the impact of this plan on Aegis facilities, personnel, and timelines. Of particular concern are the effects of new modernization and fielding rates on the technical infrastructure of the Aegis fleet. This report examines the potential benefits of the IWS model and the challenges associated with the transition from the Navy's legacy model for Aegis acquisition and development. It examines the pace of upgrades to both hardware and software and the speed with which they spread throughout the fleet. Finally, it proposes an upgrade schedule that offsets software (advanced capability builds) and hardware (technology insertions) to maximize the Navy's benefit from commercial industry's technology replacement cycle and ensure value for fixed development and testing budgets.
Note Print version record.
Language English.
Subject United States. Navy.
États-Unis. Navy.
United States. Navy
AEGIS (Weapons system)
HISTORY -- Military -- Naval.
AEGIS (Weapons system)
Other Form: Print version: DeLuca, Paul. Assessing Aegis program transition to an open-architecture model 9780833078797 (DLC) 2013008312 (OCoLC)830089472
ISBN 9780833083357 (electronic bk.)
083308335X (electronic bk.)
9780833078797
0833078798
Report No. RAND/RR-161-NAVY
Standard No. AU@ 000061155740
AU@ 000066334089
GBVCP 1008661112

 
    
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