Adopting new tech can lead to sleepovers
FCC CIO David Bray compared his agency's move to the commercial cloud as akin to Apollo 13 – "everything was cool – at first."
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FCC CIO David Bray says that he learned the hard way that moving to the commercial cloud is sometimes an actual physical undertaking akin to buying a new home.
Over the Labor Day weekend, his agency moved entirely to the commercial cloud as part of an ongoing IT modernization effort, powering down all of its servers and moving them to a public provider. The switch from having the facilities on FCC property to the public cloud provider’s entailed physically moving almost 200 servers.
“The Thursday before Labor Day at 2 p.m., we powered down everything that was at the FCC,” he said in remarks at an AFCEA Bethesda breakfast on Sept. 15. “By midnight everything was turned off. We had that moment of ‘what could possibly go wrong?’ I realized that I had just turned off the FCC completely. We moved everything onto seven trucks and hoped we didn’t get into any accidents.”
When the servers arrived at the provider’s location, Bray said, that’s when things got really interesting. It was apparent as the team began putting things back together that the new cable configurations for the systems that had been worked out before the move weren’t going to work, in spite of all the software analysis and pre-move due diligence. “This is thousands of cables,” he said. “It was like the Apollo 13 launch. Everything was cool -- at first.”
Then it wasn’t.
And contractors and FCC IT personnel worked for the next 55 hours to fix the problem on the spot. Some personnel, according to Bray, lived on the premises for days with sleeping bags, so they wouldn’t waste time going to and from the site. The problems delayed the switchover by a couple of days – but Brays says a less resilient response might have resulted in a months-long debacle.
Other panelists at the AFCEA event said such critical all-hands-on-deck thinking is key to the federal government’s adoption of the latest technology – and to dispensing with what is now an overwhelming reliance on legacy tech.
To help adapt to those changes, Greg Godbout, chief technology officer at the Environmental Protection Agency, said he is working on a tech development and acquisition group for EPA similar to the 18F effort he helped start at the General Services Administration. The idea for projects like GSA’s 18F is to seed a small area for people to try new things in a controlled environment and show others in the organization how they work.