Army wants to go big with Small Computer Program
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The Army plans to flex its IT purchasing muscle at the start of fiscal 2006 by using bundled purchases to get IT hardware products at reduced rates.
Army CIO Lt. Gen. Steven Boutelle has issued a draft policy that makes use of the buying vehicle mandatory beginning Sept. 30.
- The Army Knowledge Online portal, for which PEO EIS picked up responsibility this month from the Network Enterprise Technology Command. AKO is the enterprise portal for the Army, and Boutelle will 'force people to put applications behind it,' Carroll said. The Army expects to award the AKO contract by June 30.
- Infrastructure Modernization, known as IMOD, will update the fiber-optic cable and wireless communications lines at major Army bases and installations. The RFP is behind schedule 'due to priority changes in 2005,' Carroll said, but will be released within the next four months. IMOD is expected to cost roughly $4 billion, and the Army is hoping to award up to eight contracts.
- Worldwide Satellite Systems will bring Combat Support System Very Small Aperture Terminals to troops on battlefields in Iraq. Last fall, the Army began using the CSS VSAT terminals in Iraq and by the end of fiscal 2006 will field more than 700 of the systems. The units include Glo- bal Positioning System receivers, motorized satellite antennas and notebook computers running special logistics applications. The systems are easy to use, take about 30 minutes to set up, cost about $75,000 each and let troops send requisitions for parts electronically, Carroll said.
- Biometrics. The Army's PEO EIS will try to pull together biometric data combed from databases in Iraq and keep it in a centralized system. Carroll said the biometrics program, expected to receive emphasis in 2006, will utilize enterprise systems.
- Information Technology Enterprise Solutions-2 Services is a consolidated contract vehicle for products and services with a $20 billion ceiling. ITES-2S, which will run for nine years, is a follow-on contract to the original ITES program. The Army plans to release a request for proposals on ITES-2S by the end of this month and award the contracts Oct. 18. The Army tapped 17 companies to compete for contracts.
- Enterprise Software Initiative is intended to consolidate requirements and establish enterprise agreements with vendors to save on software by buying in bulk.
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