The Marine Corps this week will officially sign a blanket purchase 
agreement with Dell Computer Corp. that will enable the service to begin 
replacing its aging information technology infrastructure as it prepares to 
move to the Navy Marine Corps Intranet.
Sources close to the deal said the agreement will be completed by mid-week.
The BPA is part of the Marine Corps' effort to replace nearly all of the 
68,000 seats under its Enterprise Sustainment Initiative, even before the 
service changes over to the new NMCI network. That change is slated to 
begin in the second quarter of fiscal 2003, officials have said.
In May, the Marine Corps awarded Dell a $17.8 million contract for nearly 
10,000 notebook computers. This week's BPA could cover the service's 
remaining seats.
The Enterprise Sustainment Initiative is something of a contingency plan 
that resulted from a delay in rolling out NMCI, a $6.9 billion effort to 
create a unified network across more than 400,000 Navy and Marine Corps 
shore-based seats.
Marine officials said that they believe their planning will enable the 
service to move forward with NMCI despite the overall rollout delays. The 
Marines are leasing the seats from Dell, which is an EDS subcontractor for 
NMCI. Furthermore, EDS has agreed to take over those PCs when the company 
begins rolling out NMCI for the Marines, service officials said.
"This is the same seat, platform, that the end user will have when we go to 
NMCI," a Marine Corps official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity.
Marine officials have stressed that the contingency plans are not costing 
additional money because they are using money that would have gone to the 
NMCI rollout.
In addition to replacing the Marines antiquated infrastructure, the 
Enterprise Sustainment Initiative will enable the service to cut the number 
of applications it uses.
Legacy applications � older programs that will not be incorporated into 
NMCI � have been a real problem for the early NMCI rollout. The Navy 
tallied nearly 100,000 separate applications. The time-consuming process of 
streamlining those applications has slowed NMCI's rollout. The new plan is 
the Marine Corps' effort to stay ahead of that issue.
http://www.fcw.com/fcw/articles/2002/0923/web-dell-09-23-02.asp

Reply via email to