In urban design & military operations – effective networks are more important than multiple connections

Following last week’s post on the subject, National Defense Magazine provides another example that highlights the risks of multiple connections and the benefits of an effective network:

U.S. Troops Loaded With Technology, But Can’t Harness the Power of the Network

A couple of quotes from the piece:

Key to this strategy is to sync up disparate programs that are important to the network, but so far have not been integrated. The Army’s acquisition bureaucracy is organized to manage stand-alone widgets and weapons, not an interconnected mesh of systems.

“The network is now the Army’s highest modernization priority,” Chiarelli (Gen. Peter W. Chiarelli, Army vice chief of staff) says. Having every soldier plugged into the tactical network and giving them means to access and distribute information would give the Army a “tremendous advantage that we never had before,” he adds.

Comments

2 responses to “In urban design & military operations – effective networks are more important than multiple connections”

  1. awhitecloud Avatar

    Yes. It’s very important to us as a City Planner. As we all know now the traffic system is a problem to every city, but how to solve the problem always not get a proper way until now.

  2. Alan Penn Avatar
    Alan Penn

    if you are getting into this you should see: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vXfV9iWYkDI

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