Satnews Daily
September 23rd, 2017

Now Open for Registration is SMI's Maritime Information Warfare Conference


Registration is now open for SMi's highly anticipated Maritime Information Warfare conference, taking place in London on the December 6 and 7, 2017.
 
This exclusive military event will focus on the growing need for navies to develop their information exploitation capabilities. As navies must now achieve strategic superiority in both conventional and asymmetrical conflict environments, knowledge is the new ‘king of the battlefield.’ The use of real-time data is key to ensuring mission success.

2017 will look at the platforms used for acquiring data; ranging from open source intelligence to more traditional ISR systems, the ways in which information is examined through big data analytics and ground-breaking machine learning before ultimately to considering how this effects decision making in the field. It also captures the current movement within the maritime domain – running off the back of the Royal Navy’s ‘Information Warrior’, which is looking to expand the Royal Navies information exploitation capabilities to achieve operational superiority at sea.
 
Covering the latest advances from Navies, Coast Guards and Maritime Agencies relating to: Information Exploitation, Artificial Intelligence, Autonomous Systems, Cyber Security, ISR, C4I, Big data, Open Source Intelligence Gathering and more.
 
With presentations from an unrivaled military and industry speaker line-up, including Mr. Stephen Rowe, Principal Engineer, Platform Systems Division from Dstl, presenting on ‘An Overview of the Open Architecture Combat System (OACS) and its Role in Enabling AI Applications, Such as STARTLE, Within Operation Information Warrior’, covering:
 

  • The importance of acquiring a range of naval applications and how to overcome disjointed application systems
  • Optimizing Combat Systems through advanced systems architecture
  • Benefits of developing enabling architectural technology to deploy an increasingly varied range of naval applications from a myriad of providers
  • Ensuring that future platforms adopt an open source architecture to safeguard future interoperability of naval programs

 

Mr. Rowe has spent most of his career in maritime research working for the UK Ministry of Defence. This has covered a wide sphere including electro-mechanical design, software intensive systems, sea trials, C2 and interoperability. In recent years, he has concentrated on the application of open systems to maritime combat system architectures, with emphasis on application integration.