Survivor
  Salary
  Perks
  Discrimination
  Top concerns
  Cool jobs
  Work vs.
  family
  10 goals
  Career moves
  Regimen
  Talents
  Salary
  Calculator
  Checklist:
  perks
  Search jobs
  NetSmart
Search and DocFinder
 
Search help/advanced search

 


News NetFlash: Daily News Internat'l News This Week in NW The Edge Net.Worker Features Research Buyer's Guides Reviews Technology Primers Vendor Profiles Forums Columnists Knowledgebase Help Desk Dr. Intranet Gearhead Careers Free Newsletters Subscription Center Seminars/Events Reprints/Links White Papers Partner with Us Site Map Contact Us Awards Corporate info Home








     



By Beth Schultz
Network World, 07/23/01

For most of his 42 years, Jeffrey Pound has lived in Dayton, Ohio, within a few minutes' drive of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. Military aircraft from B-52s to F-16s piercing the skies have been as much a fixture in his life as hot, humid summers.

So in some respects, the fact that Pound has spent his entire IT career — 15 years — programming tests, designing infrastructure, planning network access and plotting security for the Air Force's premiere research and development laboratory comes as no surprise. Today, he serves as CTO of the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL), a $2 billion technology wonderland charged with developing technologies for future Air Force use.

Advertisement:

Pound's work has helped scientists explore every aspect of the Air Force — its aircraft, pilots, missiles, defense information systems, space vehicles — you name it. His work has included writing control programs for tests that use hydraulics or sound to break aircraft parts, and provisioning and securing pipes that transport data collected in the AFRL's seven wind tunnels and many human effectiveness labs.

Ironic for a man who doesn't really like airplanes. But contrasts define this self-described odd bird nesting among the research scientist population at the AFRL. "I'm a flaming extrovert in a place full of introverts," he says, laughing.

The passions that landed Pound at Wright-Patterson are computers and engineering. "I've wanted to be an engineer as far back as I can remember," Pound says. "My mom even says that when I turned 2, she gave me extension cords as part of my birthday present, and that I was ecstatic!"

Pound's journey to AFRL CTO began in 1985, during an internship writing computer programs for the Air Force's Air Vehicles researchers. "I was working on this multimillion-dollar test. . . . What an incredible summer!"

After taking a full-time position on June 20, 1988 — nine days after graduation and five days before getting married — Pound did down-and-dirty programming for years, then became a computer integration engineer and, eventually, CIO of the Air Vehicles Directorate, a $100 million organization now under the AFRL's wing. This prepared him well to become CTO of the AFRL, one of the highest ranking IT executives on base.

"Some people questioned why I'd go from CIO to CTO, but more important is that I went from being CIO of a $100 million organization to CTO of a $2 billion-plus organization. That's a lot more influence," Pound says proudly.

From glass to glass

As AFRL CTO, Pound's authority reaches from "glass to glass  — from the fiber the base provides, to the desktop the user looks at," he says. He provides the computing environment for AFRL's 5,400 full-time civilian and military workers, plus another 2,500 to 3,500 contractors and unspecified numbers of summer interns. Pound says he always builds for 10,000 seats.

Those seats are extremely varied, from computers outfitted to handle basic office and administrative functions to those with almost Cray-like computing power crunching colossal volumes of sensitive research data. Such diversity makes standardizing on a desktop environment difficult. But AFRL uses Microsoft Office and Windows 2000 widely. And in the fall, Pound will oversee a large-scale Active Directory pilot.



Beyond the basics, Pound leaves most desktop decisions to the CTOs at AFRL's 10 technical directorates — Air Vehicles, Directed Energy, Human Effectiveness, Information, Materials and Manufacturing, Munitions, Propulsion, Sensors, Space Vehicles and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research. While Pound doesn't directly oversee these CTOs, he chairs the CTO Council, a team that deals with technical IT issues for AFRL. The council meets every two weeks, via videoconferencing for those at the seven other bases where the AFRL has facilities. In turn, all CTOs advise their CIOs, who make business decisions based on the input.

User diversity also means Pound needs a full complement of network connections. A researcher might have a 100M bit/sec Ethernet link, a Gigabit Ethernet connection or an OC-3 pipe to the desktop, for example.

To support those varied connections, AFRL uses an ATM mesh in some spots and an FDDI metropolitan-area network elsewhere. At last count, Pound says, about 70 Cisco 7000 class routers were in use. 

Data leaving the base travels over an OC-12 connection into the Defense Research and Engineering Network (DREN). DREN is an AT&T OC-48 ATM cloud connecting the eight AFRL bases and other Department of Defense sites involved in high-performance computing. As the Air Force's majority user of DREN, AFRL must make sure the network can securely support the Air Force's future bandwidth needs, Pound says.

AFRL's Information Directorate alone says it will need in excess of 2,000 gigaflop years of computing power next year and 23,000 gigaflop years by 2006, just on the unclassified side. That 2002 figure exceeds the current capacity requirements of the Air Force as a whole, Pound says.

"We're not talking about the kind of high-speed computing most people think of as high-performance," Pound says. "We're way, way out there. Everybody knows the leading edge and that in front of that is the bleeding edge. But on a lot of things, we're out on the screaming edge."

It all adds up to a cool job, albeit not the highest paid. But Pound isn't concerned about salary right now.

"I know this sounds hokey," he  says, "but I'm paying Uncle Sam back for being able to live in a country where you can choose what you want to do, where we can have open conversations."

Work in an unusual place?
Let us know!

What's unusual about your workplace?

Name:
E-mail address:

Thank you! When you click Submit, you'll be taken back to this page.

Apply for your free subscription to Network World. Click here.

Get Copyright Clearance
Request a reprint or permission to use this article.

Send this article to a colleague

Please select a type of format for the email you want to send:
TEXT
HTML
Recipient's name:

Recipient's e-mail:
Your name:

Your e-mail:
Comments:

Feedback

Tell us your thoughts on this article or the issues raised in it. We'll cc: the author and editors on all comments.

Comments:

Name:
E-mail address:

Can we post your comments in an online forum on the topic?
Yes No

What did you think of this article?
Very useful Somewhat useful Not at all useful

Would you want to see:
More articles on this topic
Fewer articles on this topic

Thank you! When you click Submit, you'll be taken back to this article.

 

TAKE THE NEWS WITH YOU
Access the latest networking news via your handheld or wireless device! With Fusion Mobile you'll get the day’s top headlines from Network World Fusion.


Sign up today!

Advertisement:


Editorial Partners program
Three free and easy ways to bring Network World's in-depth editorial content to your own Web site.
Learn more




  Copyright, 1995-2002 Network World, Inc. All rights reserved.