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Industry Viewpoint: Five Essential Networking-On-The-Move Capabilities 6/19/19, 10(06 AM

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Industry Viewpoint: Five Essential Networking-


On-The-Move Capabilities
10/22/2018
By Charlie Kawasaki

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Industry Viewpoint: Five Essential Networking-On-The-Move Capabilities 6/19/19, 10(06 AM

Photo: Defense Dept.

In battlefield environments, the fight does not stop just because a warfighter is moving. Doing so would put them at
a distinct disadvantage if they cannot maintain situational awareness at all times.

Information dominance requires networking-on-the-move capabilities that enable warfighters to stay on top of
complex threat environments.

The Marine Corps Networking-on-the-Move Increment 1 Refresh program is an example of an integrated tactical
mobile network working to e!ectively leverage proven commercial and government technology to expand and
enhance communications capabilities. Combat vehicles integrated with networking-on-the-move equipment
provide on-the-move communications, mission command and situational awareness from anywhere on the
battlefield and in even the most remote environments and challenging terrains.

To ensure that warfighters can fully leverage networking-on-the-move for mission success, there are five essential
capabilities that such implementations should deliver.

One is the ability to handle rugged terrain. “On-the-move” is a term that can be liberally interpreted, but su"ce to
say soldiers operating in complex environments are not often cruising down well-paved roads at 35 miles per hour.
For that reason, networking-on-the-move systems must be able to handle a variety of expected and unforeseen
situations vehicles encounter.

For example, when traversing rugged terrain, the vehicle can experience a high level of shock and vibration, and
networking-on-the-move systems must be able to stand up to that abuse so that communications are not
interrupted.

In the past, methods to deploy access to tactical networks have included commercial-o!-the-shelf equipment
designed for data-center environments. This type of equipment is not typically intended for tactical or networking-
on-the-move applications and was often only suitable for use when vehicles remained stationary.

A new generation of ruggedized COTS equipment is now available that makes networking-on-the-move more
reliable, while continuing to maintain interoperability with enterprise networking equipment, ensuring end-to-end
communications.

The second capability is addressing full mobility needs in constrained spaces. Mobility ultimately drives networking-
on-the-move, but the amount of available real estate within ground vehicles and aircraft does not change. This
means vendors must deliver an increasingly advanced set of networking capabilities in a constrained environment
that will never grow. In fact, along with increasing demands on communications systems to provide more capability,
such as Wi-Fi or LTE in the field, comes the side e!ect of networking systems consuming more space.

As a result, full mobility demands innovation and modernization designed to reduce size, weight and power
requirements. In this realm, all else being equal, communications equipment can never be too small, too light or too
power e"cient.

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Industry Viewpoint: Five Essential Networking-On-The-Move Capabilities 6/19/19, 10(06 AM

Number three is to meet stringent vehicle requirements. Defense solutions must meet high standards of
environmental testing for shock, vibration and temperature. Compliance with third-party testing to MIL-STD-810G
and MIL-STD-461F are critical to assure reliability in actual operations in remote or mission-critical settings. These
standards are increasingly relevant as the Defense Department increases adoption of COTS technologies in lieu of
purpose-built military only products, in order to benefit from the commercial world’s rapid pace of technology
advancement and cost-saving economies of scale.

"Communications systems have become increasingly complex to


configure, manage and operate..."

Requirements for ground vehicles are stringent. New networking-on-the-move capabilities available to warfighters
reflect evolving vehicle requirements. Thankfully, new airworthy systems are delivering higher physical density —
amount of network functionality per cubic inch — more processing capability to collapse software application stacks
onto a single server, and compliance with stringent security and encryption standards.

It is important that networking-on-the-move systems can be standardized across vehicle types. Communications
mobility comes into play here as well, as warfighters benefit from the ability to take systems from one vehicle to
another as needed, or simply take the system out of the vehicle for use on the ground, enabling them to use the same
system whether in-transit or in-theater, reducing setup time, compatibility and training issues.

Number four is delivering real-time visibility. It is natural to assume that networking capabilities while on-the-
move are most critical in theater when preparing for or engaging with adversaries. It is true this is very important.
However, soldiers and personnel also require this capability to ensure e"cient supply and logistics operations. The
ability to communicate needs for ammunition and other supplies in real-time — as opposed to waiting for at-the-
halt — ensures that soldiers have the supplies they need, when they need them.

Another key use of networking-on-the-move is the ability for troops to share situational awareness and command
and control between vehicles in a convoy on the move. The benefits of this are obvious, and as more information
moves to IP-based systems, networking-on-the-move must be deployed to ensure access to real-time information
at all times.

And finally, number five is an intuitive user interface. While small sized, rugged COTS equipment that can stand up
to punishment is becoming available, one thing has not changed: the complexity of managing the dizzying array of
technology required to make all of the equipment work as an integrated system.

To make matters worse, communications systems have become increasingly complex to configure, manage and
operate due to the need to integrate more types of technology such as wireless, advanced security, streaming video
and new applications, all from multiple vendors. As a result, the myriad of user interfaces and options confronting
warfighters increase training requirements, make configuration more error-prone and lengthen setup times.

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Industry Viewpoint: Five Essential Networking-On-The-Move Capabilities 6/19/19, 10(06 AM

To combat this trend, programs deploying networking-on-the-move must consider an intuitive interface that users
can operate with minimal training to ensure mission success. The interface should consolidate the setup,
configuration, management and troubleshooting of the vendor-diverse array of networking equipment and software
found on these mobile platforms.

Due to advances in miniaturization of enterprise-class technology into small form factor solutions that can
withstand the punishment that vehicle-mounted use cases dish out, networking-on-the-move is well on the way to
deployment and can continue to advance in the face of its challenging environments.

By selecting solutions with the essential capabilities described above, programs can ensure their success even as new
demands and applications continue to roll out.

Charlie Kawasaki is chief technology o"cer for PacStar, a Portland, Oregon-based provider of hardware and software
communications products for commercial and military customers.

Topics: Battlefield Communications, C4ISR

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