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Forget Google and Amazon, the DoD Shows Off What a Real Cloud Platform Can Do

Written by Sarah Perez / October 7, 2009 5:56 AM / 11 Comments

Just because computing is done in the cloud, that doesn't mean it has to be insecure and subject to outages. Or so says the U.S. Defense Department who just put into operation their cloud computing services for military personnel. Originally launched a year ago, the platform, called RACE (Rapid Access Computing Environment), was initially used for the testing and development of new applications. Now, the military says RACE is ready to go live...complete with 99.999% uptime - the same as their regular computing environment. Take that, Google!

Earlier this week, the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) announced that the RACE platform was now going into production mode and will be used to deliver cloud-based applications to military personnel. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, Henry Sienkiewicz, the technical program director of DISA's computing services and RACE team, says the RACE platform is far more secure and stable than commercial cloud services, such as those offered by Google.

He notes that the service-level agreements (SLAs) for all the hosted applications are the same as those offered in the operation's traditional on-site computing environment - that is, 99.999% uptime. Google only offers 99.9% as does Amazon S3...and yes, those extra digits make a world of difference.

In addition, DISA also uses the same information assurance process (the process of managing information-related risks) for the RACE applications as it does for any apps running on the traditional, on-site computing platform. They've even cut the security accreditation process from 80 days to 40 thanks to built-in information insurance controls in RACE. 

One of the most obvious benefits of a cloud computing infrastructure, though, is the speed of deployment. The cloud platform has cut the acquisition time for a new server from 6 months to 24 hours - a change that means DISA will now be able to rapidly deploy new applications to the military in record time. "That's a must for worldwide missions with ever-changing computing requirements," says Sienkiewicz.

RACE runs using VMware on HP blade servers. Defense Department customers can choose either Microsoft Windows or Red Hat Linux and are able to configure their server with up to 4 CPUs, 8 GBs of memory and up to a terabyte of storage. Test servers are $500 per month and production servers are $1200 per month. Next year, RACE will be deployed on the DoD's classified network (SIPRNet) as well. 


Comments

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  1. Unlimited budget will do that for ya.

    Posted by: Mikael | October 7, 2009 6:05 AM



  2. it's so lame to compare RACE to google. Please stop posting such stupid things

     Posted by: Anton Author Profile Page | October 7, 2009 7:07 AM



  3. "lame to compare RACE to google"? I'm not sure why it's lame to compare cloud environments. It's interesting to note that the comparison comes from the DoD, rather than being added by RWW.

    Now, DoD, get some of those cool sims of yours up into the cloud, charge for premium versions, and stop taking so many of my tax $ ;)

    Posted by: changingway.org Author Profile Page | October 7, 2009 7:15 AM



  4. Useless..!

    USA should sign the Kyoto treaty.All this computing power requires more energy, which basically means destruction of rain forests, uncontrolled industrialization, overutilzation of fossil fuels resulting in increased global warming and Aab Shaikhs getting filthy rich...!

    Where is that Gor? Why isent he speaking against this high resource wastage?

    Bad for the future..!

    Posted by: Zen Joshi | October 7, 2009 8:21 AM



  5. That's great, but where can we see this RACE thingie?

     Posted by: Dmitry Author Profile Page | October 7, 2009 8:38 AM



  6. @Anton: As @changingway.org noted, the comparison was being made by Henry Sienkiewicz of DISA, not I. He specifically said RACE is more secure and stable than commercial cloud services.

     Posted by: Sarah Perez Author Profile Page | October 7, 2009 8:57 AM



  7. Stupid. This is like the 15th fracking repost of the same lame news. There is a significant difference between IaaS and PaaS, where google is the latter, and RACE is the former...which is just provided by VMWare anyway. Quit trying to hype boring DoD crap...this ain't GPS.

     Posted by: Kit Author Profile Page | October 7, 2009 9:39 AM



  8. What?! No obligatory Skynet reference here?

    Pretty sweet stuff nonetheless!

    Posted by: dillie-o.myopenid.com Author Profile Page | October 7, 2009 9:45 AM



  9. anybody else find it rather hysterical that the link to RACE is actually

    c:\Users\Sarah\Pictures\%Web\blog\military_server.png

    ?

    Posted by: teeler | October 7, 2009 11:25 AM



  10. So DOD is using the same technology as RackSpace, GoDaddy and many other hosting providers that charge about ten bucks a month? Cool.

    Except for the fact that DoD (meaning you, the taxpayer) is probably paying about a hundred times the cost.

    Posted by: Tom | October 7, 2009 10:32 PM



  11. Hey Sarah this post is really a very nice & infomercial, i really like this stuff..

    Skynet has been borne. It will become self-aware on Dec 12, 2012 at 12:12 EST...

    Posted by: jeu enfant | October 8, 2009 2:35 AM



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