The Military, Mobile Strategies and Mobile Apps
My son, a 2nd Lieutenant in the U.S. Army, was reviewing the list of speakers at an upcoming Enterprise Mobility for Defense conference where I will be speaking and said, “You are the only non-General on the agenda. Why would they ask you to speak?” Our kids humble us don’t they? The bottom line though is the military desperately wants to use commercially available mobile apps and mobile technologies whenever they can. They are very keen to learn all they can about mobility and how it can be used to the advantage of our military forces.
In advance of the conference, I participated in an interview with the Institute for Defense and Government Advancement. Here is the interview transcript.
Welcome Kevin.
the main benefits of being mobile for the military.
with situational awareness in the field. The ability for both commanders and their soldiers in
the field to be able to know where they are located, where their opponents are located, where their supplies and assets are located and their numbers and availabilities, and what areas are safe or unsafe. They need to know where there are imminent
threats. They need to be able to collect data and access data from
any kind of sensors, whether they are drones in the sky or data collected through other sources, and then overlay that information on a map on a mobile device. These capabilities enable them to have an awareness of what’s going on around them.
military, 95% of the challenge a commander faced was finding the opponent, and then finding their own resources so they could develop a successful plan or mission.
collected in real time, fed back to intelligence analysts, and then on to the soldiers in
the field. Again, it is all about
situational awareness made possible through a connected
or network-centric environment.
defense on mobile enterprise solutions? What are the keys to remember?
understanding the connectivity issues that the real world presents to soldiers. In many cases the landscape is not conducive to certain kinds of
communication. So any time you have consultants working in the defense industry, they need to always be thinking of those two points, because no matter
how clever or innovative a mobile app or solution works in an optimal environment, it must continue to work in bad environments as well. That means a lot of testing in rough and deadly environments.
between commerical solutions aand defense with enterprise mobility.
testing the concept of having Android developers assigned to particular units
in the field, so they can quickly develop mission specific apps in just a few hours. That’s a concept that’s way
ahead of what most companies are doing in the commercial sector. What makes it possible is having a library of widgets and pre-developed apps that are small
and simple but can be quickly aggregated together for a mission. I think these strategies are really demonstrating the power of combining the military’s strategies with commercial app store concepts.
how mobility can truly be transformative.
patterns of life in the military that are being evolved right now. These
concepts are really focused on the use of persistent surveillance and analytics
that are looking for patterns. Patterns
of activities and behaviors in a particular region can tell analysts a lot about
the risk involved in a region. That
information can make all the difference in how a mission is planned and
executed. To be able to overlay patterns of activity and behavior from a particular
region on a map and then view it on your mobile device is powerful. These kinds of capabilities require good security and connectivity in the field. You need the ability to
query for information and to be able to see real time data on what’s over the
hill and around the corner. These kinds of
technologies and strategies are saving American and allied forces’ lives every
day and completely changing how missions are executed.
blind. Real time visibility on a mobile
device, connected to a network-centric environment, can help soldiers by
providing information on neighborhoods, buildings, roads, cultural environments
and event history in their area. We can
then add things like live video feeds and social sentiment analysis where data on attitudes and
opinions of people living in the region can be analyzed to better understand an
area. All of these capabilities combined can completely change the way a
mission is planned and executed – that is transformative innovation that can
save the lives of our soldiers.
regard to mobile apps and mobile adoption – it’s something you write about quite
a bit on your blog www.mobileenterprisestrategies.com
unique variation of Android for use by soldiers. They wrote a document that says how you can
secure an Android device to the security levels required for military use. This is likely just a hypothetical scenario
now but an interesting development.
iPhone, he knows his soldiers use iPhones, and his goal is to make sure that those iPhones in the pockets of his soldiers are more useful. There is a lot of information the
military needs to share with their forces and their families, and these devices can be useful for that purpose. In order to save money, rather than buying purpose built
military grade devices and apps where there is likely a premium on the cost,
the military wants to use commercially available technology whenever possible.
military is ahead of the commercial side on mobile strategy, but not on the latest mobile technologies and apps. There is a lot these two sectors can learn from each other.
meeting you when you present at the Enterprise Mobility for Defense Summit.
Head Analyst for SMAC (Social, MOBILE, Analytics and Cloud), Cognizant
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