The $10 billion Navy-Marine Corps. (NMCI) intranet is not meeting its goals. The 10-year project steered by EDS has not met most of its key objectives.

 

Worse yet, a report by the Government Accountability Office (see GAO-07-51) is critical of NMCI for never implementing a plan developed in 2000 to measure and report project progress. GAO says that NMCI intranet – subsequently valued at $12 billion – has met a paltry three of 20 performance targets set for the intranet.

 

 

Yet again there’s proof positive that without a plan, most intranets fail and die. Many die a slow death, but they all die without a proper – and implemented – plan.

 

"By not implementing its performance plan, the Navy has invested, and risks continuing to invest heavily, in a program that is not subject to effective performance management and has yet to produce expected results," auditors said.

 

The consolidated voice, video and data network links hundreds of thousands of military and at its peak will connect more than 500,000 sailors and Marines at about 1,000 locations across the planet.

 

NMCI intranet facts from EDS:

  • More than 500,000 users are on board NMCI. Only the Internet is larger.
  • More than 305,000 seats are under EDS management – a single seat, such as a workstation or laptop, can support more than one user.
  • More than 260,000 seats have been transitioned to the end-state NMCI environment.
  • More than 346,000 seats are on order.
  • NMCI and EDS operate:
    • Four network operations centers
    • Three enterprise help desks
    • Sixteen (of 19 planned) classified server farms
    • Thirty-one (of 31 planned) unclassified servers farms
  • More than 350 sailors have attained IT-related certifications at no cost to the government, including the Department of the Navy’s first three Microsoft-certified systems engineers.
  • Improved security is unquestionably NMCI’s greatest value:
    • In 2005, NMCI's security stopped more than 20 million attacks on the network.
    • Each month, NMCI traps, quarantines and disinfects approximately 70,000 viruses.

Read GAO’s entire evaluation report.

RELATED READING:

$9 Billion Bugs for U.S. Navy-Marine Corps Intranet (back issue)

World’s largest intranet now valued at US$12 billion

Good news and good news for world’s largest and most troubled intranet

 

 

Digg this           Post to del.icio.us         Post to Slashdot

 

 

For more intranet news visit www.IntranetReport.com

 

© 2006 Toby Ward - Prescient Digital Media