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Sponsored By
CANES:
Published By
The Navy has entered the full production phase that will install
CANES on all platforms in its inventory objective, which includes
ships, submarines and land sites. Navy photo of the USS Ronald
Reagan (CVN 76) Carrier Strike Group.
An Open Systems C4I
Networks Design
The Navy’s newly deployed afloat information technology system called
CANES is a cyber-secure solution that consolidates key legacy C4I networks
by employing flexible open architecture to generate long-term savings and
bring operational agility to the warfighter.
2
CANES: An Open Systems C4I Networks Design
CANES, or Consolidated Afloat Networks and Enterprise
Services, is based on a Northrop Grumman design that
leverages the company’s vast expertise in cyber and
embraces open systems for continuous competition to
drive innovation up and cost down.
Northrop Grumman applied its Modular Open Systems
Approach-CompetitiveTM
(MOSA-C) for the CANES
design to bring the lifecycle benefits of open-systems
architecture and commercial off-the-shelf components
and software. The MOSA-C process allows for long-
lasting solutions that improve interoperability and lower
total ownership cost.
“By maximizing commonality and using our MOSA-C
to drive down material costs, Northrop Grumman has
delivered dozens of affordable, highly capable shipsets
that enable information dominance to the warfighter,”
says Sam Abbate, vice president and general manager for
the command and control division at Northrop Grumman.
Since winning the contract for a limited-production
run for CANES in early 2012, Northrop Grumman has
delivered 37 shipsets. Some of them are already installed
on Navy ships and actively serving forward deployed
sailors and Marines.
With CANES, the Navy is making sea-based C4I
networks easier to operate, creating a common computing
environment, reducing costs associated with maintaining
legacy systems, and allowing for rapid upgrades to get the
most capable technology to the warfighter while quickly
meeting emerging threats.
“CANES is designed to maximize commonality across
the fleet. Its open architecture allows for rapid deployment
of new and existing apps,” says Catherine Meyn, Northrop
Grumman’s program manager for CANES. “And we
integrated information assurance into the product right
from the beginning.”
Assured Cybersecurity
When the CANES program was initiated years ago, the
world was in the early stages of recognizing the harm
potential adversaries or hackers could inflict in the cyber
CANES units bound for installation aboard the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76) are
loaded and tested in the SPAWAR Network Integration and Engineering Facility prior to delivery.
Photo: U.S. Navy
3
CANES: An Open Systems C4I Networks Design
domain. In the time since, the threat has become palpable, and
countering it has grown into an urgent national security priority.
“The CANES shipsets we are producing today are
information-assured cyber-robust systems,” Meyn says.
Northrop Grumman was among the earliest in the defense
industry to grasp cyber’s importance and leverage it into
the design and development of CANES. Northrop Grumman’s
broad approach accounted for a host of issues, ranging
from the physical protection of the system to system-wide
monitoring, as well as identification and protection against
potential threats, says Meyn.
“We’re applying our 30-plus years of cyber expertise
to ensure customer missions are protected,” Meyn says.
“To defend against an increasingly sophisticated threat,
cybersecurity has got to be part of the plan. Building it in
upfront makes it affordable and allows you to operate in a
trusted environment.”
As the Navy proceeds with CANES, Northrop Grumman will
continue to offer cyber solutions to guard against tomorrow’s
threats, and has already developed new technology,
leveraging expertise from its Advanced Cyber Technology
Center (ACTC), to allow end-users to safely interact with
CANES using portable devices like smartphones and tablets.
The ACTC, which launched last year, harnesses cyber
innovation from across the company to bolster resiliency for
customers worldwide.
The open architecture standards designed into CANES allow
for the introduction of new, emerging technologies like iPhones
and Android devices before they were household items.
“Even back then we were looking beyond a Blackberry,
to think about how this new technology would transition,
and we assumed there would be movement toward other
devices,” Meyn says.
Northrop Grumman’s ACTC developed an advancement
in trusted mobility called TEMPO that the company will
demonstrate to the government. TEMPO complies with access
validation through a Common Access Card (CAC) approach and
would allow sailors to securely use smartphones or tablets
with CANES. TEMPO ensures proper user identity and checks
apps on the devices to ensure they are safe, Meyn says.
“We are using our internal research and development to
identify even more ways that we can improve cyber on CANES
and carry it to the deck plate and beyond,” Meyn says.
Reaching for the Cloud
The Navy is planning to use CANES as the backbone
for an expansion to the Tactical Cloud to quickly and cost
effectively access, deploy and store Big Data.
While the Cloud was not on the horizon when CANES was
designed, the Navy is able to take advantage of its open
architecture design to adapt the system for Cloud operations.
“CANES is a tremendous capability,” Meyn says. “When we
started, there was no Cloud. But as with all new technology,
once you get it you find it’s used in ways that you never
imagined when it was being designed.”
CANES would allow sailors to access data on the Cloud
while underway without having to store it all on the ship,
limiting the need for massive amounts of onboard storage
space. End-users could acquire the requisite data and send
it back to the Cloud once the mission is complete. They
could also share new data with others by uploading it to
the Cloud.
“The point of Cloud computing is having the right
information at the right time in the right place,” Meyn says.
“The Cloud allows you to collect and contain enormous
amounts of data and disseminate it to the right location in
the right format.”
CANES is simplifying the IT infrastructure on Navy ships.
CANES is consolidating multiple legacy ship information technology
networks. U.S. Navy image.
ADNS
ISNS
SCI Networks
SubLAN
CENTRIXS-M
VIXS
CANES
4
CANES: An Open Systems C4I Networks Design
Open Competition
The Navy has entered the full production phase that will
install CANES on all platforms in its inventory objective,
which includes ships, submarines and land sites. The
Northrop Grumman design owned by the Navy will serve as
the basis for full production units that will be awarded in
small numbers at a time to competing companies.
The acquisition strategy is intended to promote continuous
competition to get the right price, a key tenet of the open
architecture business model increasingly critical in an era of
constrained budgets.
Northrop Grumman was quick to harness the potential
of open architecture solutions, and to recognize the value
of sharing data rights with the government, minimizing
sustainment and lifecycle costs while promoting a
collaborative and competitive environment.
“We know that we will always be looking into the future
and innovating,” Meyn says, outlining why Northrop Grumman
was comfortable handing over the data rights in partnership
with the Navy.
“We know that technology is fleeting, and people are
always moving to the next technology,” she adds. “We
can leverage that technology. So can the government. And
together we can come up with something that is better than
the sum of its parts.”
Northrop Grumman’s Modular Open Systems Approach-Competitive
(MOSA-C) model allows CANES to minimize lifecycle costs and bring
agility to the warfighter. Image: Northrop Grumman
The USS McCampbell (DDG 85) was the first Navy ship to become operational
with CANES. Photo: U.S. Navy
25770

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Canes_Supplement_Defense_Daily

  • 1. Sponsored By CANES: Published By The Navy has entered the full production phase that will install CANES on all platforms in its inventory objective, which includes ships, submarines and land sites. Navy photo of the USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76) Carrier Strike Group. An Open Systems C4I Networks Design The Navy’s newly deployed afloat information technology system called CANES is a cyber-secure solution that consolidates key legacy C4I networks by employing flexible open architecture to generate long-term savings and bring operational agility to the warfighter.
  • 2. 2 CANES: An Open Systems C4I Networks Design CANES, or Consolidated Afloat Networks and Enterprise Services, is based on a Northrop Grumman design that leverages the company’s vast expertise in cyber and embraces open systems for continuous competition to drive innovation up and cost down. Northrop Grumman applied its Modular Open Systems Approach-CompetitiveTM (MOSA-C) for the CANES design to bring the lifecycle benefits of open-systems architecture and commercial off-the-shelf components and software. The MOSA-C process allows for long- lasting solutions that improve interoperability and lower total ownership cost. “By maximizing commonality and using our MOSA-C to drive down material costs, Northrop Grumman has delivered dozens of affordable, highly capable shipsets that enable information dominance to the warfighter,” says Sam Abbate, vice president and general manager for the command and control division at Northrop Grumman. Since winning the contract for a limited-production run for CANES in early 2012, Northrop Grumman has delivered 37 shipsets. Some of them are already installed on Navy ships and actively serving forward deployed sailors and Marines. With CANES, the Navy is making sea-based C4I networks easier to operate, creating a common computing environment, reducing costs associated with maintaining legacy systems, and allowing for rapid upgrades to get the most capable technology to the warfighter while quickly meeting emerging threats. “CANES is designed to maximize commonality across the fleet. Its open architecture allows for rapid deployment of new and existing apps,” says Catherine Meyn, Northrop Grumman’s program manager for CANES. “And we integrated information assurance into the product right from the beginning.” Assured Cybersecurity When the CANES program was initiated years ago, the world was in the early stages of recognizing the harm potential adversaries or hackers could inflict in the cyber CANES units bound for installation aboard the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76) are loaded and tested in the SPAWAR Network Integration and Engineering Facility prior to delivery. Photo: U.S. Navy
  • 3. 3 CANES: An Open Systems C4I Networks Design domain. In the time since, the threat has become palpable, and countering it has grown into an urgent national security priority. “The CANES shipsets we are producing today are information-assured cyber-robust systems,” Meyn says. Northrop Grumman was among the earliest in the defense industry to grasp cyber’s importance and leverage it into the design and development of CANES. Northrop Grumman’s broad approach accounted for a host of issues, ranging from the physical protection of the system to system-wide monitoring, as well as identification and protection against potential threats, says Meyn. “We’re applying our 30-plus years of cyber expertise to ensure customer missions are protected,” Meyn says. “To defend against an increasingly sophisticated threat, cybersecurity has got to be part of the plan. Building it in upfront makes it affordable and allows you to operate in a trusted environment.” As the Navy proceeds with CANES, Northrop Grumman will continue to offer cyber solutions to guard against tomorrow’s threats, and has already developed new technology, leveraging expertise from its Advanced Cyber Technology Center (ACTC), to allow end-users to safely interact with CANES using portable devices like smartphones and tablets. The ACTC, which launched last year, harnesses cyber innovation from across the company to bolster resiliency for customers worldwide. The open architecture standards designed into CANES allow for the introduction of new, emerging technologies like iPhones and Android devices before they were household items. “Even back then we were looking beyond a Blackberry, to think about how this new technology would transition, and we assumed there would be movement toward other devices,” Meyn says. Northrop Grumman’s ACTC developed an advancement in trusted mobility called TEMPO that the company will demonstrate to the government. TEMPO complies with access validation through a Common Access Card (CAC) approach and would allow sailors to securely use smartphones or tablets with CANES. TEMPO ensures proper user identity and checks apps on the devices to ensure they are safe, Meyn says. “We are using our internal research and development to identify even more ways that we can improve cyber on CANES and carry it to the deck plate and beyond,” Meyn says. Reaching for the Cloud The Navy is planning to use CANES as the backbone for an expansion to the Tactical Cloud to quickly and cost effectively access, deploy and store Big Data. While the Cloud was not on the horizon when CANES was designed, the Navy is able to take advantage of its open architecture design to adapt the system for Cloud operations. “CANES is a tremendous capability,” Meyn says. “When we started, there was no Cloud. But as with all new technology, once you get it you find it’s used in ways that you never imagined when it was being designed.” CANES would allow sailors to access data on the Cloud while underway without having to store it all on the ship, limiting the need for massive amounts of onboard storage space. End-users could acquire the requisite data and send it back to the Cloud once the mission is complete. They could also share new data with others by uploading it to the Cloud. “The point of Cloud computing is having the right information at the right time in the right place,” Meyn says. “The Cloud allows you to collect and contain enormous amounts of data and disseminate it to the right location in the right format.” CANES is simplifying the IT infrastructure on Navy ships. CANES is consolidating multiple legacy ship information technology networks. U.S. Navy image. ADNS ISNS SCI Networks SubLAN CENTRIXS-M VIXS CANES
  • 4. 4 CANES: An Open Systems C4I Networks Design Open Competition The Navy has entered the full production phase that will install CANES on all platforms in its inventory objective, which includes ships, submarines and land sites. The Northrop Grumman design owned by the Navy will serve as the basis for full production units that will be awarded in small numbers at a time to competing companies. The acquisition strategy is intended to promote continuous competition to get the right price, a key tenet of the open architecture business model increasingly critical in an era of constrained budgets. Northrop Grumman was quick to harness the potential of open architecture solutions, and to recognize the value of sharing data rights with the government, minimizing sustainment and lifecycle costs while promoting a collaborative and competitive environment. “We know that we will always be looking into the future and innovating,” Meyn says, outlining why Northrop Grumman was comfortable handing over the data rights in partnership with the Navy. “We know that technology is fleeting, and people are always moving to the next technology,” she adds. “We can leverage that technology. So can the government. And together we can come up with something that is better than the sum of its parts.” Northrop Grumman’s Modular Open Systems Approach-Competitive (MOSA-C) model allows CANES to minimize lifecycle costs and bring agility to the warfighter. Image: Northrop Grumman The USS McCampbell (DDG 85) was the first Navy ship to become operational with CANES. Photo: U.S. Navy 25770