Title :
Net-centric system development
Author :
Henry, Will ; Stevens, Jeff
Author_Institution :
MITRE Corp., Colorado Springs, CO
Abstract :
The United States Department of Defense (DoD) is pursuing a systems philosophy known as net-centricity in an effort to address the rapidly changing nature of military actions across the globe. This philosophy leads to an enterprise consisting of increasingly complex interrelated systems. Numerous failures as well as dramatic cost and schedule overruns on these programs may be symptomatic of the failure of current system development life cycle (SDLC) methodologies employed by the DoD. This paper examines the increasing complexity due to net-centricity and why this complexity may cause traditional SDLC methodologies to fail thus requiring a new methodology to address this level of complexity. The paper then builds on enterprise system engineering research, extant theory (e.g. complexity, control and systems theory) and existing agile development methods to develop a framework for a SDLC methodology tailored to address the unique characteristics of the complex systems inherent to net-centricity.
Keywords :
large-scale systems; military computing; United States Department of Defense; agile development methods; complex interrelated systems; enterprise system engineering research; extant theory; net-centric system development; system development life cycle methodologies; Biological control systems; Companies; Control systems; Costs; Nonlinear control systems; Scheduling; Springs; Systems engineering and theory; US Department of Defense; USA Councils; Adaptive systems; Asymptotic stability; Biological systems; Complexity theory; Control systems; Decoupling of systems; Design methodology; Interconnected systems; Large-scale systems; Military information systems; Network-Centric; Networks; Nonlinear systems; Planning; Self-organizing control; System analysis and design; Systems engineering;
Conference_Titel :
Systems Conference, 2009 3rd Annual IEEE
Conference_Location :
Vancouver, BC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3462-6
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3463-3
DOI :
10.1109/SYSTEMS.2009.4815772