Today iTKO made an announcement about our strategic partnership with Harris Corporation, a Fortune 200 systems integrator we have been working with on several significant projects in the US Department of Defense and other federal agencies. Read the press release here.
What is significant about this? Many organizations (commercial and government) are realizing that while developers can build and integrate software faster than ever, their testing efforts have proven inadequate at keeping up. These agencies need proactive, automated, and continuous validation to ensure trust and reliability in federated, mission-critical systems that are subject to constant change.
iTKO and Harris are responding to this challenge with a validation and virtualization solution that will appeal to organizations that trust and rely on these systems. Examples include federal emergency management centers, military command and control systems, financial institution trading systems, utility energy management grids, airline traffic control networks, and many others.
While we have been cooperating with leading government contractors like Harris for 4 years on integration projects like these (see this iTKO paper on Federated governance we first wrote 3 years ago...) we have seen a major shift occurring in the way Federal agencies specify and manage their complex applications. They are moving to a shared services / shared components model, where different functional units (or, services) are consumed and managed by different teams, with a central point of certification and testing for these services.
A federated, shared governance model means there is just enough governance enforced at a central level, and authority for managing and using the application components is doled out to the constituents. We compare it to a Federal government vs. state's rights, vs. city council authority model. The federal government might specify a budget for a highway, but it doesn't dictate where parking is located in the city.
This federated model works very well for defense agencies and the many firms that support them, as they are all working toward a common goal - delivering functionality to the warfighter with maximum efficiency. As we have frequently mentioned in this blog, businesses would do well to take cues from how government scales their systems and cooperates to meet goals - they were leaders in SOA and will likely continue to lead the way in many aspects of modern application governance.

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