Search FCW


Subscribe Now!
Table of Contents
Sprint
Business
BPM
CXOs
Columns
Columnists
Defense
E-Government
Elections 2008
Enterprise Architecture
Funding
Homeland Security
Health IT
IPv6
LOB
Management
Procurement
Privacy
Policy
Program Management
State and Local
Security
Technology
Telework
Training and Certification
Workforce

More Topics
resourcecenter
Home
Letters to the Editor
Current Issue/Download
Print/Online Archives
Editorial Calendar
researchstore
resourcecenter
Communications for Continuity Operations

Oracle Resource Center
NEW! Transforming Data Center
Managed Services
Service Oriented Architecture
Training & Simulation
Networking Communications
Security Directives and Compliance
Data Center Virtualization
Air Force ELSG Contract Guide

More >>



Latest News
ADVERTISEMENT





 

Federal architecture eyed as way to topple barriers

By Heather H. Havenstein<
Published on June 2, 2003

Comment

Click here to comment on this article


Related story links

Collaboration takes new forms

Workflow tools reveal sharing trouble spots

Federal architecture eyed as way to topple barriers

Government interest in Web services grows


Newsletters

You might also be interested in these FCW newsletters:

Daily

To learn more, click here.


For many agencies sizing up potential technology components to shore up their information-sharing and collaboration needs for homeland security, the federal enterprise architecture will be a blueprint for the technology deployment and will help ease the cultural barriers to cross-agency cooperation.

"Government folks are not used to thinking about what they are doing as an enterprise," said Anthony Cresswell, deputy director of the Center for Technology in Government at the University at Albany. "These organizations have to have two kinds of things worked out for themselves: What their business objectives are and what the larger objectives are at the enterprise level of one agency working with another."

Once implemented, the architecture will detail data ownership and date usage, so it is well-suited to demolish agency fiefdoms around data that may need to be shared for homeland security reasons, said Howard Stern, senior vice president of Federal Sources Inc.

"The federal enterprise architecture is the Holy Grail," Stern said. "The architecture is a blueprint for how processes work within the agencies or the data requirements that need to be passed between processes for the ownership of that data...and then it talks about the kind of infrastructure that is necessary to support that application. [It] allows for an agency to know who owns what data, who touches it and who has responsibility for it."



upcoming event

Green Computing Summit, Ronald Reagan Building, Washington, DC
December 2 - December 3, 2008

Trusted Internet Connection and the Comprehensive National Cyber Security Initiative, The Willard Intercontinental Hotel, Washington, DC
December 4, 2008


 

head
fcw
issue
First Name State
Last Name Zip
Title Email