performance-sensitive elements within the system,
ensuring that these issues are addressed early and often.
The CTIA SOA is early in its development and we are
still collecting metrics on performance and testing.
However, since these technical concerns are an on-
going investigation, we will continue to identify and
address them as needed. We plan to include those
findings and related data in future reports.
4 CONCLUSIONS
In this paper, we briefly described the U.S. Army’s
overall effort, experiences and lessons learned while
modernizing its Live Training Transformation (LT2)
product line. To this end, the U.S. Army decided to
leverage the industry-wide knowledge and success of
cloud computing using SOA, and it has identified this
business approach as the new migration to its LT2
product line. Based on work accomplished so far from
such an effort, the U.S. Army believes that this transition
is already increasing the interoperability of its different
networks, databases, and interfaces that support live
training. At the same time, the U.S. Army also
acknowledges the fact that this paradigm shift poses
various new challenges. For instance, just as there is not
an "out of box" cloud-based strategy, there is not a "one
size fits all" testing framework. Based on such an
observation we have found and discussed above some
existing cloud-based testing techniques and approaches
that could be used for the LT2 transition. However, we
understand that further investigation is needed here
before any decisions are made.
We have also made an attempt in this paper to
explain how the U.S. Army’s PEO STRI has
incorporated the concept of TaaS (Training as a
Service) in order to successfully migrate and
modernize its simulation and training legacy software
for the live training domain. Based on early
observations, it appears that the TaaS strategy
addresses the need to reduce costs and leverage
technology developments in order to better support
the soldiers’ training needs. However, as we have
described in our lessons learned section above, there
exist some challenges. For example, SOA and cloud
adoption related caveats are typically centered on
network bandwidth, latency, software scalability and
other technical issues. Furthermore, any changes to
architectures and software services must consider the
security and accreditation impacts that might affect
information assurance.
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