Justin Brunelle of MITRE gave a recap of the MITRE Cloud Collaboration Sessions at the Federal Cloud Computing Summit on Dec. 17, 2013 at the Ronald Reagan Building in Washington, D.C.
6. End-to-end
Service Delivery
• Need a la carte
pricing
• Not all services
suitable for cloud
• Need improved
models
• Assured elasticity
with fixed max cost
9. Academic
Collaboration
• Interop: mobile as enabler
• End-to-end: need real-time
to disconnected users
• SLAs: improved modeling
• Security: need automatic
detection
• Need:
– Industry days
– Attention to government trends
– Industry to Academia Signal for need
11. Call for mentors!
• Leverage Academia
• Use a talent agent
– AMARC
– MITRE
jbrunelle@mitre.org
12. Dan Mintz
•
•
•
•
Executive Director of AMARC
Former CIO
Fed 100 Award Winner
Adjunct Professor, IT Education:
– Syracuse University
– University of Maryland University College
Editor's Notes
Thanks collaboration session attendees. great turnout from government, industry, and academia generated actionable recommendations for major cloud challengesThank Tom Suder and MobileGov for hostingThanks government and industry for attending
From MITREThought leader in cloud computingLead cloud research for the DoD and ICCurrent focus is on tactical clouds, ad-hoc cloud data sharingSTEM Outreach lead in Hampton RoadsAlso a PhD Student at ODUResearching web scienceIncluding the Memento project focusing on web-scale data extraction and organizationIn my work:Established an understanding of major challenge areasSeen parallels between government, industry, and academiaThe collaboration sessions we held yesterday provided an opportunity for each of those three groups to collaborate on lessons learned, approaches, and actionable recommendations for solving these challenge areas.More importantly, this is the first attempt at establishing a government-industry-academia community of collaboration around cloud computing.
Recommendations for migrating to- and between-cloudsApproaches for ensuring data and service portabilityRecommendations/Approaches/Standards for allowing cross-cloud communication and data sharing (both between and within silos in the government).
Recommendations for migrating to- and between-cloudsApproaches for ensuring data and service portabilityRecommendations/Approaches/Standards for allowing cross-cloud communication and data sharing (both between and within silos in the government).
Recommendations for migrating to- and between-cloudsApproaches for ensuring data and service portabilityRecommendations/Approaches/Standards for allowing cross-cloud communication and data sharing (both between and within silos in the government).
Recommendations for migrating to- and between-cloudsApproaches for ensuring data and service portabilityRecommendations/Approaches/Standards for allowing cross-cloud communication and data sharing (both between and within silos in the government).
Recommendations for migrating to- and between-cloudsApproaches for ensuring data and service portabilityRecommendations/Approaches/Standards for allowing cross-cloud communication and data sharing (both between and within silos in the government).
As mentioned, this is the first attempt at utilizing academics at this scalePast academic publications include foundations for cloud.Many relevant discoveries have come out of academia. Government has the opportunity to direct which outcomes are worked.Benefits to Industry/GovernmentAcademics provide theoretical perspectiveCapable of research grant money (NSF)Provide high-level outcomesPageRank, kryder’s law and its role in cloud pricing, and the REST paradigm were all academic deliverables – peer review and doctoral worksBenefits to Academia:Curriculum designIncreased research fundingHigher quality graduatesBetter workforce, increased collaboration, higher-quality deliverables
Call for mentor participationHelp direct curriculaSet research goalsLeverage academic researchCreate partnerships/talent pipelinesWe are working to create the community around thisLeverage the contacts to government, academia, and industry between AMARC and MITRE
As a testimony to academic successes and planned use, I’d like to introduce Dan Mintz from AMARC.