Interview: Lee B. Holcomb
Lee B. Holcomb has served as NASA's chief information officer since October 1997. Before becoming CIO, Holcomb served as director for information technology strategy, overseeing IT programs that supported the agency's Aeronautics and Space Transportation Enterprise and the national aerospace industry. He has a master's degree from the California Institute of Technology and a bachelor's degree from the University of California at Los Angeles.

![]() Who's In Charge |
| Lee B. Holcomb Chief Information Officer
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CONTRACTORS (in millions, fiscal 1998) |
| United Space Alliance-------$1,285.6 Lockheed Martin Corp.--------$373.1 Computer Sciences Corp.-----$217.1 Northrop Grumman Corp.-----$120.1 McDonnell Douglas Corp.----$111.7 Brown & Root Services Corp.-$69.9 Cortez III Service Corp.----------$47.2 Silicon Graphics Inc.-------------$39.1 Swales & Associates Inc.------$37.5 Boeing Co.-------------------------$37.1 ___________________________ Total----------------------------$2,338.4 |
Lee B. Holcomb has served as NASA's chief information officer since October 1997. Before becoming CIO, Holcomb served as director for information technology strategy, overseeing IT programs that supported the agency's Aeronautics and Space Transportation Enterprise and the national aerospace industry. He has a master's degree from the California Institute of Technology and a bachelor's degree from the University of California at Los Angeles.
NASA submitted a fiscal 2000 budget of $13.6 billion. But a House subcommittee passed a bill in July that slashed the agency's budget to $11.6 billion'about 11 percent below President Clinton's request for fiscal 2000. GCN recently talked to Holcomb about how the proposed NASA budget cut would affect the agency's IT programs.
![]() | NASA's Mark Hagerty, left, and OAO Corp.'s Phil Davis visit the Greenbelt, Md., company's Command Center East, which is testing 450-MHz Compaq Deskpro 6450 Pentium III PCs with 13.5G hard drives, 64M of RAM and Microsoft Windows NT. OAO is one of seven Outsourcing the Desktop Initiative for NASA contractors. Under a $154.9 million task order, the company is taking over management of PCs at the Johnson, Kennedy and Stennis space centers and the Marshall Space Flight Center. |
Wing and a prayer
Outsourcing the Desktop Initiative for NASA'
Consolidated Space Operations Contract'
Engineering Test and Analysis Support Contract'
Base Operations Support'
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