How to Keep Up With the Rise of Voice, Video and Data
The need for scalability, flexibility, adaptability and resiliency will only increase over time, and moving to an Ethernet-based network supports that.
The need for scalability, flexibility, adaptability and resiliency will only increase over time, and moving to an Ethernet-based network supports that.
We all know that the Defense Department (DOD) operates across land, sea, air and space. But there’s another domain for which it’s not always recognized: information.
Our armed forces are faced with near-peer adversaries who have developed many systems that are competitive on a system-to-system basis. How can the U.S. assert and maintain dominance in this environment?
Whether in planes, jeeps, portable shelters or on the battlefield, missions must be accomplished regardless of obstacles.
Data collection and organization are important steps in becoming more data-centric. For data to truly be useful, it should be accessible to everyone.
As the world’s largest employer, the Defense Department’s innovation strategies can inform and improve other agencies that follow them.
The Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) supports the U.S. military’s combat logistics worldwide, so it cannot spare many delays.
To say that digital modernization is purely a cost-savings initiative is a myth.
DoD is committed to managing its data as a critical part of its overall mission. By not treating it as a separate commodity, the department expects to make faster, better-informed decisions.
After more than 30 years of struggling to deliver enterprise applications, DoD and other organizations are considering a new approach: composable ERP.