DocumentCode
963898
Title
The Business Case for System-Wide Information Management
Author
Glickman, Steven
Author_Institution
Boeing Phantom Works, Seattle
Volume
22
Issue
10
fYear
2007
Firstpage
3
Lastpage
12
Abstract
In today´s National Airspace System (NAS), when an application requires information from another application, a custom application-to-application interface is built. This results in an increasingly complex system, where applications are tightly coupled and expensive to develop and maintain. System-Wide Information Management (SWIM) addresses these shortfalls by implementing a shared infrastructure for managing NAS information. SWIM is based on a service-oriented architecture, a fast growing trend in information technology. It will help the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) meet the information-sharing needs of the Next Generation Air Traffic System (NGATS) and the federal government´s E-government Initiative. SWIM will reduce the cost, complexity, and cycle time for building new applications and help the FAA implement SWIM-enabled applications that increase FAA and user productivity.
Keywords
information management; software architecture; travel industry; user interfaces; E-government initiative; Federal Aviation Administration; National Airspace System; Next Generation Air Traffic System; application-to-application interface; business case; information sharing; service-oriented architecture; shared infrastructure; system-wide information management; Air traffic control; Control systems; Costs; FAA; Imaging phantoms; Information management; Information technology; Service oriented architecture; Testing; US Government;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Aerospace and Electronic Systems Magazine, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-8985
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MAES.2007.4376105
Filename
4376105
Link To Document