December 21 2006 at 7:52 AM No score for this post
(Login Dick Gaines) Forum Owner from IP address 68.184.88.13
The Strategy Page
Marines 0, Geeks 1
December 21, 2006: The commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps, and the
sergeant-major of the marines, are going around giving pep talks to the
troops about the new computer system the navy and marines are using. The
troops don't like it, but the commandant tells them there isn't any money to
redo it, so get used to NMCI (Navy Marine Corps Intranet) the way it is.
NMCI is so user unfriendly that many sailors and marines are communicating
via commercial email accounts, rather than use their government issued ones.
NMCI is a project that has the navy spending nearly $9 billion to connect
some 400,000 PCs into one large, and secure (all data is encrypted) Internet
like network. This will provide high speed, hassle free communications for
everyone involved. At least in theory. After six years of effort, users have
a growing list of complaints. For example, because the navy found that there
were over 100,000 different bits of (previously unknown) software being used
on navy PCs, making the new network function at all proved much more
difficult than anticipated.. Some of these 100,000 program were created by
sailors to make their work easier, but the navy never really knew about this
home brew stuff. At least not until they tried to get all navy PCs to
communicate as a form of super-Internet. Initially, all the disruption
caused by standardizing PC operating systems and software upset a lot of
users. In late 2003, some 50 percent of navy PC users were unhappy with
NMCI. But by early 2004, 60 percent were satisfied, and as of June, 2004, 80
percent were satisfied. However, the improvement was not all it appeared to
be. Users were asked to rank their satisfaction on a 1 (not) to 10 (very)
scale. Anyone who comes in at 5.5 or higher, on average, was considered
"satisfied." In reality, most users are not happy with NMCI. Users don't
like the idea that they have lost some control over their PC (which now has
a lot of network standards to conform to), and that their computers are
slower now because of all the network software.
Ultimately, the Department of Defense wants all the services to be able to
communicate with each other quickly, easily and at high speed via a special
military Internet. But first, each service has to get all of its own people
working together. In the navy, this is not working. This failure has been
something of a dirty little secret. No sailors or marines wanted to risk
their careers by going public about it. That is, except for a navy reservist
who happens to be a member of Congress. That would be Republican Mark Kirk
of Illinois. He's a reserve officer, and he made public the "user
unfriendly" nature of NMCI, and how sailors and marines use civilian
Internet resources to avoid having to use the new navy network. Over the
next three years, the navy plans to more than $3 billion on NMCI. The navy
says it will make NMCI more user friendly. Eventually. Meanwhile, the
marines are being told to suck it up, and carry on.