Monday, August 8, 2011

Android Kicks ove the Nett Warrior Can??


Breaking News – Nett Warrior Cancelled  (July 27, 2011)

Nett Warrior was the Army’s latest, in a long line of digitization efforts designed to increase the situational awareness of the Soldiers. But, earlier today we received reports that Nett Warrior, the culmination of over 20 years of development and testing, has been cancelled in favor of a Commercial-Off-The-Shelf (COTS) based handheld device combined with a Soldier radio. Numerous reports have recently mentioned experiments using the Android operating system on board the Joint Battle Command-Platform, developed by MITRE Corp. Apparently, they’ve paid off. Look for an RFQ on this piece soon.

This decision will come as a blow to three major defense contractors who have not traditionally participated in the Soldier Systems industry: Rockwell Collins, Raytheon, and General Dynamics. All three were contenders for the production version of Nett Warrior and all three invested a great deal of capital in preparing for this program. What’s just as bad are the countless small business vendors who had partnered with these companies who will have to make some tough decisions in the coming weeks.

One question comes to mind. Is this the first casualty of the new defense budget environment or a preemptive move by new PEO Soldier BG Camille M. Nichols to cut some chaff and protect the rest of her portfolio of programs from the budget axe?

While it’s not really all that surprising from an operational standpoint that Nett Warrior was cancelled, there has been a great deal of Congressional interest in the concept as it has transitioned from one program to the next over the past 20 years beginning with Land Warrior. You can go back a few more if you include SIPE (Soldier Integrated Protective Ensemble). It will be interesting to see if Congress once again breathes life into this program considering the number of jobs it represents.

Army Hits Pause on ‘Wearable Computer’ Program
The Army’s long-awaited program to outfit soldiers with wearable computers isn’t exactly dead. But it’s in a state of suspended animation while Pentagon officials figure out if it needs a brain transplant.
She did, however, push back hard against a recent report in the plugged-in blog Soldier Systems that Nett Warrior is done, dead, finito. Nett Warrior’s just on hold, Dawson says; the board is not considering the broader question of killing the program. And Nett Warrior is famously hard to kill: it was originally something called Land Warrior, another system providing wearable connectivity for soldiers that was first conceived in the mid-90s, back when a phone was just for making phone calls.


But Soldier Systems might just be prematurely correct. If the board is considering incorporating smartphones or tablets into Nett Warrior, it might consider cutting out the middleman and recommending the Army use those devices for connectivity. The Army recently tested a variety of smartphones at the White Sands Missile Range running on the Army’s private data network, and its vice chief, Gen. Peter Chiarelli, told a House panel on Tuesday the devices and the network all performed swimmingly. If Nett Warrior is effectively in suspended animation, it might not be long before the Army pulls the plug.

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