‘Grand success’ of OCONUS edge computing test gives Army momentum to tackle tactical cloud next
The Army is getting closer to fulfilling its ambitions to deliver cloud services to the tactical edge following a pilot test delivering edge computing to Guam, which Army Chief Information Officer Raj Iyer described as a “grand success.”
The February test lays the groundwork for the Army’s program to establish cloud at commands outside the continental United States (OCONUS).
“The First Corps, based out of Joint Base Lewis–McChord, made it part of one of their experiments to show how they can take mission command on the move using edge computing devices and then to be able to link back to data that was in the enterprise cloud,” Iyer told Federal News Network. “And it showed that [this capability] was not only much more resilient than the existing solutions that they had, but the performance, the reliability and the latency [were] far superior than anything that they’ve been used to. So technically, we know it can work.”
The First Corps was able to perform mission command functions from a C-17 Globemaster III over the Pacific Ocean en route to Guam and then later from a naval ship. The idea is to distribute command and control functions over a series of nodes, rather than centralized in one place, to remain mobile and present less of a target to adversaries.