22 nd - 23 rd FEBRUARY 2012 |NH DANUBE CITY HOTEL, VIENNA
Transcript of 22 nd - 23 rd FEBRUARY 2012 |NH DANUBE CITY HOTEL, VIENNA
www.mobiledeployable.comRegister online or alternatively fax your registration to +44 (0) 870 9090 712 or call +44 (0) 870 9090 711
BOOK BY 31st OCTOBER AND SAVE £300 I BOOK BY 30th NOVEMBER AND SAVE £100
CONFERENCE CHAIRMAN:
Nigel Beer, Communications & Electronic Systems, PA Consulting
SPEAKER PANEL INCLUDES:
22nd - 23rd FEBRUARY 2012 | NH DANUBE CITY HOTEL, VIENNA
• Learn about NATO's steps towards
interoperable mobile deployable
communications
• Analyse the latest operational
experiences from both NATO and
national perspectives
• Receive keynote addresses from
Lieutenant General Kurt Herrmann,Director, NATO Communications and
Information Systems Services Agency
(NCSA) and Brigadier General GregoryBrundidge, Director, Command,
Control, Communications and
Warfighting Integration, US European
Command (EUCOM)
• Discuss the current technology being
deployed and what future solutions
industry are providing for the end user
• Address the security challenges facing
military communications experts in the
field
BOOK BY
31st OCTOBER
AND SAVE £300
BOOK BY
30th NOVEMBER
AND SAVE
£100
21st FEBRUARY: PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOPSatellite & Satellite-Hybrid Communications Networking Capability and
Civil-Military Inter-Agency Collaboration 13:30 - 18:00
Receive first class presentations from the
following programs and commands:
NATO Communications and InformationSystems Services Agency (NCSA);EUCOM; JAPCC; NATO StandardisationAgency; British Army; US Navy;Norwegian SATCOM Advisory Board
Lieutenant General KurtHerrmann, Director, NATOCommunications andInformation SystemsServices Agency (NCSA)
Brigadier General GregoryBrundidge, Director, Command,Control, Communications andWarfighting Integration,US European Command (EUCOM)
Sponsored by
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Colonel Vlastimil Maly, Head of
Communication and Information
Systems Department (K-209),
Czech Republic
Captain Mehmet Cem Kizil,
Turkish Navy, NATO Standardisation
Agency
Colonel Teodor Aldea, Information
Technology and IT Security Branch
Chief, CIS Dept, European Union
Lieutenant Colonel Mike Delorey,
C4ISTAR Branch (Deployable CIS),
NATO Joint Airpower Competence
Centre
Dr. Bharat Doshi, Director of the
Milton S. Eisenhower Research
Center (MERC), Johns Hopkins
University
Carlo Zammariello, Software
Defined Radio Principal Officer,
European Defence Agency
Lieutenant Colonel Gregory Motes,
FA53 Course Leader, US Army
Signal Center
Commander Nigel Chandler,
Fleet Communications Officer,
Navy Command, Royal Navy*
Captain Martin Murray, SO3 G6,
British Army
Kai Tang, Director, SATCOM
Division, PEO C4I, Navy
Communications Program Office,
US Navy*
Michael McCarthy, Director of
Operations, Brigade Modernization
Command, TRADOC, US Army
Trond Hermansen, Norwegian
Armed Forces Director, SATCOM
Advisory Board, CHOD*
*Subject to Confirmation
HOSTED BY
“Great discussion and exchange of information ondeployable comms and CIS networks.” US Army
DAY ONE I 22ND FEBRUARY 2012 www.mobiledeployable.com
Supported by
Register online at www.mobiledeployable.com • Alternatively fax your registration to
08.30
REGISTRATION & COFFEE
08.50
CHAIRMAN’S OPENING REMARKS:
Nigel Beer, Communications & Electronic Systems,
PA Consulting
SESSION 1: INTEROPERABILITY PART ONE
09.00
KEYNOTE ADDRESS: Evolution of NATO CIS in ISAF
• The Afghan Mission Network (AMN)
• Functional Area Sub-systems (FAS’es)
• The ISAF DCIS Concept, including the Deployed Services
Topology Service Management Framework
Lieutenant General Kurt Herrmann, Director, NATO
Communications and Information Systems Services
Agency (NCSA)
09.40
Czech CIS Teaching and Training
• Current status in CIS and communications
• Future plans for Czech communications
• The role of the University of Defence
Colonel Vlastimil Maly, Head of Communication and
Information Systems Department (K-209),
Czech Republic Armed Forces
10.20
MORNING COFFEE
SESSION 2: SATCOM FOR DEPLOYABLE COMMS
10.50
SDR Standardization Approach for Commercial, Public Safety
and Military Domain
• SCORED: Addressing Military Software-Defined Radio
capabilities including Cognitive Radio-based Spectrum
Management in the Security and Defence domains
• SDR related capabilities in Europe for military and civilian users
• Operational and technical management of the Radio
Spectrum
Carlo Zammariello, Software Defined Radio Principal
Officer, European Defence Agency
11.30
Securing Worldwide Coverage within Satcom (VSAT) Solutions
• Procuring on-demand satellite capacity in defined areas
• Ensuring the reliability and availability of communications for
Norwegian military units around the world
• Frequency bands and flexibility
Mr. Trond Hermansen, Norwegian Armed Forces Director,
SATCOM Advisory Board, CHOD*
12.10
NETWORKING LUNCH Sponsored by
13.25
VSAT Portable Terminals and EOD Disposal
• Operations and experiences in Afghanistan
• Utilizing high speed terminals in battlespace
• EOD Disposal and the importance of robust comms
Kai Tang, Director, SATCOM Division, PEO C4I, Navy
Communications Program Office, US Navy*
14.05
Securing Commercial SATCOM Networks
• MILSATCOM vs. COMSATCOM
• Ground Infrastructure/Gateways
• Subscriber Devices
• National vs. Coalition Standards
• Future Plans/Strategies
Jackson Kemper, Vice President, Business
Development, Government Programs, Iridium
14.45
AFTERNOON TEA
SESSION 3: NETWORKING AND DATA MANAGEMENT
15.15
Realizing the Promise of Current and Future Mobile Networks
• Achieve a unified experience by integrating multiple access
technologies
• Discover how a converged network platform can be used to
improve service delivery
• Merge existing and future infrastructure to deliver advanced
tactical capabilities
Senior Representative, Cisco
15.55
Resilient, High Data Rate Communication in Tactical
Environments: Needs, Challenges and Potential Solutions
• New ISR and C2 requirements are creating the need for very
high data rate communication between deployed platforms
(ships, planes, ground vehicles, UAVs, satellites, etc.) and
between those platforms and collection/analysis/action
locations
• All weather, high data rate communication at high data rates
require a mix of technologies (e.g. Free Space Optics, MM-
Wave, Lower Frequency RF), each with its challenges and
opportunities
• Advances in these technologies promise a hybrid architecture
to meet these demanding requirements
• Discussion of different scenarios and platforms, requirements,
capabilities of different technologies and a hybrid
architecture
Dr. Bharat Doshi, Director of the Milton S. Eisenhower
Research Center (MERC), Johns Hopkins University
16.35
CHAIRMAN’S CLOSING REMARKS AND END OF DAY ONE
*Subject to Confirmation
DAY TWO I 23RD FEBRUARY 2012 www.mobiledeployable.com
o +44 (0) 870 9090 712 or call +44 (0) 870 9090 711 • GROUP DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE
08.30
RE-REGISTRATION & COFFEE
08.50
CHAIRMAN’S OPENING REMARKS:
Nigel Beer, Communications & Electronic Systems,
PA Consulting
SESSION 4: INFORMATION DOMINANCE
AND BATTLESPACE MANAGEMENT
09.00
KEYNOTE ADDRESS: Integrated and Deployable Communications
for Rapid Response - A USEUCOM Perspective
• Ensuring information dominance and interoperable C4 systems
• C4I provision for military operations and crisis response
Brigadier General Gregory Brundidge, Director of
Command, Control, Communications and Warfighting
Integration, US European Command
09.40
Information Services – Training for Operations
• Overview of Collective Training Group (including Collective
Training Establishments and key hybrid foundation / mission
specific training events)
• Overview of UK forces mission specific training progression and
how mobile deployable CIS support this
• Challenges of training the ‘operational information
environment’ – replication, simulation or emulation?
• Key mobile deployable CIS – tactical, operational and
strategic capabilities
• Integrating ISTAR – the challenges of providing a homogenous
‘information environment’
• The ‘application space’
Captain Martin Murray, SO3 G6,
British Army
10.20
MORNING COFFEE
SESSION 5: DEPLOYABLE COMMS IN THE AIR
AND MARITIME DOMAINS
10.50
NATO Deployable CIS from the JAPCC Perspective
• Current status
• Addressing NATO’s future DCIS needs
• Procurement strategies for NATO DCIS
Lieutenant Colonel Mike Delorey, C4ISTAR Branch
(Deployable CIS), NATO Joint Airpower Competence
Centre
11.30
Deployable Communications – The Maritime Challenge
• Case study – Coalition maritime operations in the Indian
Ocean and Arabian Gulf
• The tyranny of distance – the enemy of maritime operations
• What is the requirement
• What solutions are currently available and how can industry help
Commander Nigel Chandler, Fleet Communications
Officer, Navy Command, Royal Navy*
12.10
NETWORKING LUNCH
SESSION 6: INTEROPERABILITY PART TWO
13.25
Mobile-Deployable CIS in Support of EU Operations
• CSDP after the Lisbon Treaty
• Mobile CIS in support of CSDP activities
• The EUs deployable CIS package
Colonel Teodor Aldea, Information Technology and IT
Security Branch Chief, CIS Dept, European Union
14.05
The Challenges of Communications Interoperability and
Standardisation Across NATO
• Implementing broader and more innovative deployable
communications using Ka-Band
• Current activities at the agency
• Practical and structural barriers to standardisation
• Plans for the future
Captain Mehmet Cem Kizil, Turkish Navy,
NATO Standardisation Agency
14.45
AFTERNOON TEA
SESSION 7: UTILIZING DIGITAL APPLICATIONS
15.15
Connecting Soldiers to Digital Applications (CSDA) in the
US Army
• Conceptualization by CIO/G6 and ARCIC: Exploring the value
of using smart phones to provide soldiers with Army
applications
• Evaluating new approaches that allow soldiers to
communicate in battlespace
• Smart Phone potential to enable every soldier access to
information
• Developing means to rapidly update and share information –
at a fraction of the cost of traditional methods
Michael McCarthy, Director of Operations, Brigade
Modernization Command, TRADOC, US Army
15.55
REMOTE PRESENTATION: Training the Army to Write Apps:
Functionality, Compatibility and Deployment
• The future of Apps in the Army
• Changing the way information is distributed
• Certification and entering the Army network
Lieutenant Colonel Gregory Motes, FA53 Course Leader,
US Army Signal Center
16.35
CHAIRMAN’S CLOSING REMARKS AND END OF CONFERENCE
*Subject to Confirmation
satnewspublishers
HALF-DAY PRE-CONFERENCEWORKSHOP
21st February 2012
13:30 - 18:00
NH Danube City Hotel, Vienna
Overview of workshop
This half-day workshop will bring together expertisefrom the satellite and satellite-hybrid communicationsindustry membership of the GVF, companies which,amongst other products and services such as fixedsatellite solutions, supply mobile and deployablesatellite and wireless broadband communicationssolutions to military and civilian agency environments,including in situations where such agenciescollaborate in the field to deliver effective disasterrecovery and emergency management responses. Itwill explore the complexities of the range of combinedactivities of military forces and civilian agencies, andto explain how the respective satellite/wirelessbroadband networking requirements of each of thesetypes of collaborator affect and inter-relate with thecommunications demands of the other.
Programme
13:30 Registration
14:00 Start of Workshop & Introductions
‘60 minute’ Focus A: The Military & Non-Military AgencyCommunications Environment
‘60 minute’ Focus B: Defence Communications Contractors &the Inter-Agency Space, etc.
16:00 Coffee Break
16:30 ‘60 minute’ Focus C: Combining Inter-Agency Satellite Communications Platforms, etc.
17:30 Interactive Question and Answer Session
18:00 Close of Workshop
About the workshop host
Martin Jarrold, Chief, International ProgrammeDevelopment, Global VSAT Forum Martin Jarrold wasappointed GVF Chief of International ProgrammeDevelopment in June 2001. His particularresponsibilities include outreach to the memberorganisations of the GVF and for the furtherdevelopment of the profile of the Forum within thesatellite communications industry, and across theglobal telecommunications policy and regulatorycommunity.
About the organisation
Founded in 1997, GVF is the single and unified voice ofthe global satellite industry. It brings togetherorganisations engaged in the delivery of advancedbroadband and narrowband satellite services toconsumers, and commercial and governmententerprises worldwide. Headquartered in London, GVFis an independent, non-partisan and non-profitorganisation with 230+ members from more than 85countries. The broad-based membership representsevery major world region and every sector of thesatellite industry, including fixed and mobile satelliteoperators, satellite network operators, teleports,satellite earth station manufacturers, systemintegrators, value added and enhanced serviceproviders, telecom carriers, consultants, law firms, andusers. www.gvf.org
Satellite & Satellite-HybridCommunications Networking
Capability and Civil-Military Inter-Agency Collaboration
HOSTED BY:
Cisco is the worldwide leader in networking
for the Internet. Today, networks are an
essential part of business, education,
government and home communications,
and Cisco Internet Protocol-based (IP)
networking solutions are the foundation of
these networks. Innovation is core to Cisco’s
product development strategy. Cisco
recognizes that features and functionality
provided across the network must enhance
availability, interoperability, mobility,
reliability, and survivability of networks and
interconnected systems. Cisco provides
secure voice, video, data and mobility
solutions in support of defence and satellite
communications. For more information on
Cisco mobility and satellite solutions, visit
www.cisco.com/go/iris and
www.cisco.com/web/strategy/government/defense_adhocmobility.html
Iridium commands the world’s furthest
reaching network, making it the only truly
global communications company with
solutions that span from pole-to-pole. Iridium
voice and data products provide superior
communications solutions that allow global
companies, government agencies and
individuals to stay connected everywhere.
With a unique, global ecosystem of partners,
Iridium continues to create new, high-value
capabilities that are leading the world into a
new era of communication.
www.iridium.com
SPONSORSHIP AND EXHIBITION OPPORTUNITIES
SMi offer sponsorship, exhibition, advertisingand branding packages, uniquely tailored tocomplement your company's marketingstrategy. Prime networking opportunitiesexist to entertain, enhance and expand yourclient base within the context of anindependent discussion specific to yourindustry. Should you wish to join theincreasing number of companies benefitingfrom sponsoring our conferences pleasecall: Fiona Punter, SMi Sponsorship on (0)20 7827 6098 or email: [email protected]
Are you interested in promoting your defenceservices to a targeted industry sector?
SMi offer tailored marketing packages so thatyour association / publication can gain
access to a global market and key decisionmakers in the defence market.
Contact Sonal Patel, SMi Marketing on+44 (0) 20 7827 6106 or email:
Sponsored by
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MOBILE DEPLOYABLE COMMUNICATIONS 2012Conference: 22nd - 23rd February 2012 | NH Danube City Hotel, Vienna, Austria Workshop: 21st February 2012, Austria
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