Would you buy a C4I system from the same people that built the F-35 and the USS Gerald Ford? Of course you would. That's why you are dysfunctional.
Riot (formerly known as Vector while it was running in Beta) is a new UK-borne app. It’s aiming to bring conversations and productivity tools together, across different apps, and providing the ability to tweak and host your own version by being open source, while also being secure. Riot is built on Matrix, an open standard for decentralized persistent communication. Riot lets teams share data and collaborate on projects across different communication apps and third party tools. It uses Matrix to bridge to external networks such as Slack, IRC, Twitter and Gitter.
Phi Beta Iota: $1.2 trillion dollars and a quarter century after Diane Webb and other defined the eighteen functionalities needed for all-source workstation, we still do not have them. “Not an expensive enough problem.” At the same time, the existing C4I system is — as Robert Steele told the National Research Council in 1994 when looking at the US Army's multi-billion futures architecture — so insular as to be deaf, dumb, and blind in relation to accessing the 95% or so of the information that is outside the wire (and generally not secret, not in English, and not online). NATO has been thinking about Alternative C4I — that's code for totally open (but secure) C4I that anyone can afford, anyone can use, allowing anyone to share and make sense together across all boundaries.
See Especially:
2015 Robert Steele – Foreword to Stephen E. Arnold’s CyberOSINT: Next Generation Information Access
1989 Webb (US) CATALYST: Computer-Aided Tools for the Analysis of Science & Technology
Worth a Look: 1989 All-Source Fusion Analytic Workstation–The Four Requirements Documents
See Also:
Alternative C4I @ Phi Beta Iota
The Original Series
Steele, Robert. “Data Mining: Don’t Buy or Build Your Shovel Until You Know What You’re Digging Into,” Washington, DC: National Research Council, October 25, 1994, to the working group reviewing the US Army’s multi-billion-dollar future communications architecture.
Steele, Robert. “Intelligence Support for Expeditionary Planners,” Marine Corps Gazette, September 1991, pp. 73-79.
Steele, Robert. “Applying the ‘New Paradigm’: How to Avoid Strategic Intelligence Failures in the Future,” American Intelligence Journal, Autumn 1991, pp. 43-46.
Steele, Robert. “Intelligence in the 1990’s: Recasting National Security in a Changing World,” American Intelligence Journal, Summer/Fall 1990, pp. 29-36.
Gray, Al (Ghost-Written by Robert Steele), “Global Intelligence Challenges in the 1990’s,” American Intelligence Journal, Winter 1989-1990, pp. 37-41.