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Navy's $6.9 billion intranet almost a reality

Navy's $6.9 billion intranet almost a reality

By:  Dan Verton  On: 17 Jun 2003 For: Channelworld India 

Officials from the U.S. Navy and Electronic Data Systems Corp. (EDS), the prime contractor for the multibillion-dollar Navy/Marine Corps Intranet (N/MCI), said Tuesday that more than 80 percent of the planned number of N/MCI desktop seats will be deployed by the end of this year, allowing the service to claim an initial victory in what has been and may still be a turbulent journey.

The House Armed Services Committee recently placed a provision in the Defense Authorization Bill calling for a $168 million IT budget reduction. And while the House version of the bill must still be reconciled with the Senate version in a House-Senate conference session, the House provision remains a big concern for both the Navy and EDS.

"Something of the magnitude of $168 million would equate to around a 10 percent reduction, or about 35,000 seats," said Richard. "That is an impact, and one that we have to look at very seriously."

Rear Adm. Munns said the proposed budget cuts are aimed at redundant programs and programs with poor management track records -- two areas that N/MCI has been designed to fix for the Navy. However, the possibility of having to cancel seat deployments that are already under way "is problematic," he said.

The Navy could also be looking at canceling additional seats, or delaying those scheduled to be rolled out in fiscal 2004, Munns said. All of those options would almost certainly increase costs by forcing the Navy and EDS to maintain quarantined legacy systems alongside N/MCI, he said.










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Dan Verton Dan Verton is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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