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2002 Conference
- New Frontiers in Netcentricity
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Highlights

The conference began with morning
addresses by two legendary innovators
and Internet pioneers, Robert E. Kahn
and David Farber.
Kahn is designer of ARPANET (now the
Internet), co-inventor of the
Transmission Control Protocol/Internet
Protocol (TCP/IP) suite, creator of the
“gateway” concept, builder of the U.S.
Strategic Computing Program, and leader
of the National Information
Infrastructure (the information “super
highway”). He offered his insights and
ideas on the future of the Internet.
Farber was recently named one of the
25 most powerful people in networking by
Network World. Farber helped design the
first electronic switching systems and
the programming language, SNOBOL, and
conducted groundbreaking research on the
world’s first operational Distributed
Computer System (DCS). He gave his
insight into the impact of Sept. 11 on
the country’s communications
infrastructure.
From the renewed promise of mobile
technologies to designing netcentric
organizations, day one was devoted to
innovative netcentric practices.
Cutting-edge industry leaders such as
Sun Microsystems, Avaya, ATG, Autonomy,
and ASD Global talked about the
challenges and solutions of
netcentricity implementation. Topics
included netcentric enterprise and
communications architectures,
personalization factors, netcentric
search services, and integration
challenges.
Day two began with national defense
IT experts John Garstka and Jacques
Gansler showing how information sharing
and modern logistics are changing the
face and pace of battle in netcentricity
in defense of America. John Clark and
Alisoun Moore reported on the
far-reaching work of the Government
Without Boundaries project, a
revolutionary way of providing seamless
local, state, and federal services
accessible by all.
Is Maryland e-ready? "Yes," said
Phillip Singerman, president/executive
director of the Maryland Technology
Development Corporation (TEDCO), during
Tuesday’s luncheon address. TEDCO is an
independent corporation created by the
state legislature to promote economic
development through the
commercialization, development, and
deployment of technology.
With its intellectual resources and
strong concentration of major netcentric
businesses, Maryland is positioned for
leadership and competitive advantage in
the coming decade. Maryland CIO Linda
Burek talked about the state’s strategy
for diffusing netcentricity in Maryland.
University of Maryland CIO Don Riley
explained how Internet 2 is developing.
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