Session 1.1 Breakfast Product Brief: The Allied and Joint Doctrine Demands for Real-Time Data
Tracks
Open Session
Tuesday, November 12, 2024 |
7:30 AM - 8:30 AM |
Royal Theatre |
Sponsored By: |
Details
No time more than today draws focus on the importance of our Alliances. In the context of Great Power competition, no one force can stand alone. Combined Joint All-Domain Command and Control (CJADC2) and U.S. Joint Doctrine focuses on integrating capabilities across Joint, Inter-Agency, Inter-Government, and Multi-National forces to address emerging threats quickly. Joint Fires (and maneuver to fire) requires interoperability between Allies and coalition partners for a unified defense. Executing joint fires requires real-time track custody management and contextually-consistent, secured data flow to maintain a unified operational picture among allies.
Open-Source Apache Kafka powers this need for real-time data by enabling scaling and flexible data ingestion and distribution. Kafka's ability to handle large volumes of data with low-latency ensures critical information reaches decision-makers enhancing situational awareness and coordination. As real-world deployments leave the air-conditioned data center for the forward-deployed vessels, airframes, and tents, the technology must also endure Denied Disrupted Intermittent and Latent (DDIL) comms channels, prioritize data synchronization in order of criticality when recovering from outage or EMCON. Data sharing must be secured at the finest granularity as we share data dynamically with non-traditional partners and dynamic security-policy enforced in real-time. These capabilities are key to maintaining readiness and agility and aligning U.S. and Australian defense strategies in the dynamic global security landscape.
Speaker
Mr Brent Perry
Principal Solutions Architect
Confluent
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Biography
Brent Perry is the Director of Solutions Architecture for Confluent Federal focusing on US Department of Defense. His role is to explore use cases and requirements for DoD customers and identify where real-time data streams bring positive outcomes to mission impacts. He worked as a full stack developer for 15 years for the DoD as a contractor before moving to work for Silicon Valley technology companies focusing on distributed data systems, NoSQL data stores, and real-time data streaming solutions. He graduated with a Bachelor's of Science in Computer Science and a Master's in Software Engineering from James Madison University and George Mason University respectively and lives in Fairfax VA.