Interview: Daniel E. Porter
Daniel E. Porter became the Navy's chief information officer in September last year after serving as the assistant deputy chief of naval operations for logistics. Porter oversees information technology standards development for the service.
![]() Who's In Charge
CONTRACTORS (in millions, fiscal 1998)
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Daniel E. Porter became the Navy's chief information officer in September last year after serving as the assistant deputy chief of naval operations for logistics. Porter oversees information technology standards development for the service.
Porter made the commitment to remain Navy CIO at least until January to oversee the service's year 2000 readiness efforts and bring stability to Navy IT. There had been three Navy CIOs during the 12- month period before Porter took the post.
He spoke with GCN about the Navy's year 2000 readiness and information assurance efforts, and how it's moving away from specifying particular products.
PORTER:
![]() Petty Officer 3rd Class Lance Pofahl, a photographer's mate on the USS Nimitz, scans negatives into his Apple Macintosh Quadra 950, which runs Mac OS 7.5 and Adobe Photoshop 5.0. He transmits images to Navy headquarters for posting on the service's Web site, at www.navy.mil. The amount of time it took to send back images from the Persian Gulf was cut from 10 days during Operation Desert Storm in 1991 to 10 minutes during Operation Southern Watch. Because Mac OS isn't included in the Navy's Information Technology for the 21st Century specifications, sailors have to receive exemptions to buy new systems, said Lt. Greg Kuntz, imagery systems photo officer on the USS Nimitz. |
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Navy'Marine Corps Intranet'Scheduled for award in June, NMCI will be a single-award $2 billion contract through which the Navy will outsource its desktop PC and network management with the goal of rolling out a secure, global intranet for about 500,000 users. Information Technology for the 21st Century'The Navy is modernizing its fleets with asynchronous transfer mode LANs on ships and ashore. The LANs will be capable of Fast Ethernet transmission rates of at least 100 Mbps. Voice Video and Data Program'Under the Navy's $2.9 billion VIVID contract, Lucent Technologies Inc. of Murray Hill, N.J., and GTE Government Systems Corp. of Needham, Mass., supply telecommunications hardware, software and services worldwide. Super-Minicomputer 2'Litton PRC offers Hewlett-Packard Co. minicomputers, servers, Unix workstations, peripherals, software and systems services under this $2.5 billion governmentwide acquisition contract. PC LAN+'Electronic Data Systems Corp. holds this $575 million contract with local area and enterprise network products, featuring integration, training and engineering services. EDS will provide services through 2001. Information Technology Support Services'Navy organizations can buy global ADP and telecommunications support services from seven companies through this five-year $250 million contract. |






