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Raytheon Successfully Completes DCGS Block 10.2 Final Design Review
GARLAND, Texas, June 21 /PRNewswire/ -- Raytheon Company successfully completed a final design review for the Distributed Common Ground System (DCGS) Integration Backbone (DIB) and the DCGS Block 10.2 multi-intelligence core. Raytheon presented its Department of Defense Architecture Framework model for the Air Force DCGS enterprise to representatives from the Air Force, Army, Navy and Marines as well as other federal agencies. A protest against the contract award recently was denied by the General Accounting Office, confirming the award decision to Raytheon. DCGS is a worldwide distributed, network centric, system-of-systems architecture that conducts collaborative intelligence operations and production. Its environment provides for both the physical and electronic distribution of Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) data, processes, and systems. Raytheon's DCGS 10.2 upgrade will be capable of continuous on-demand intelligence brokering that will enable American and coalition forces to get the information they need to take action and influence events in hours, minutes or even seconds. In the review, the Raytheon team previewed the system's Web services and applications that are built upon the DIB. Rapid application development and deployment was completed less than six months after the program began and validates the open, standards-based architectures Raytheon built with commercial, off-the-shelf technology. "We've met or exceeded all design requirements for DCGS Block 10.2," said John Nannen, vice president of Remote Systems for Raytheon's Intelligence and Information business. "The delivery of the Air Force DCGS Web portal, a publish-and-subscribe broker, and a commercial-off-the-shelf workflow manager, will greatly enhance our customer's access to intelligence data as well as provide a rapid tasking capability for the U-2, Predator and Global Hawk platforms. "DCGS Block 10.2 is a major modernization of the infrastructure and architecture of Air Force intelligence processing systems," Nannen said. "DCGS Block 10.2 includes a shift from the traditional Task, Process, Exploit and Disseminate chain to an open, standards-based infrastructure that fully supports the Task, Post, Process, and Use model." In addition, Raytheon recently conducted a technical exchange meeting in Quantico, Va., with representatives from the armed services and intelligence community, defining how the DIB will allow interoperability, data sharing and collaboration among the services' DCGS elements. Raytheon and its teammates (including BAE SYSTEMS, General Dynamics, L3 Communications and Lockheed Martin) are using an enterprise, modular, architecture drawn from current military and national programs and based on proven commercial and government products. The open architecture and standards-based system will lay the foundation for DCGS Block 10.2, Block 20, Block 30, and beyond. The open architecture approach ensures joint interoperability and reduced cost as future upgrades are integrated. Raytheon Company (NYSE: RTN), with 2003 sales of $18.1 billion, is an industry leader in defense and government electronics, space, information technology, technical services, and business and special mission aircraft. With headquarters in Waltham, Mass., Raytheon employs 78,000 people worldwide. Contact: Patrick McKenna 972.205.7121 SOURCE: Raytheon Company Web site: http://www.raytheon.com/