At IBB, a Call for Rejuvenation
http://www.rwonline.com/article/at-ibb-a-call-for-rejuvenation/23858
by Paul McLane
on 07.06.2011
     


If you´re a tech manager in a bureaucracy, you´ll appreciate the headaches that 
confront 
engineers at the International Broadcasting Bureau.

Lack of standards, poor IT wiring, vulnerable points-of-failure, an inundation 
of new platforms 
and low morale might plague any organization. But we get an unusually frank 
look at such 
problems within the technical arm of U.S. international broadcasting thanks to 
an in-house 
report that came to light recently.

It was written in 2010 by the new top engineer at the IBB, which supports the 
Broadcasting 
Board of Governors. That in turn runs Voice of America, Radio Free Europe/Radio 
Liberty, 
Radio Free Asia, the Middle East Broadcasting Networks and the Office of Cuba 
Broadcasting.

Andre' V. Mendes set out a plan of how to "transform" their technical and IT 
operations. As I 
wrote on Radio World´s website, the attention-grabber is a recommendation to 
lay out a plan 
to "sunset" U.S. shortwave operations; but there´s lots of interesting reading 
in the 
"2010-2012 BBG Technology Strategic Plan." A Freedom of Information Act request 
led to its 
publication on nonprofit governmentattic.org.

`Serious impediment´

Intriguing is how he paints issues within IBB´s two technology spheres - 
traditional 
engineering and IT - and how those overlap, not always smoothly.

"Today´s effective separation and isolation between engineering and IT 
constitutes a serious 
impediment to progress," Mendes wrote.

He laid out problems facing engineering staff, noting the proliferation of 
platforms they must 
learn - AM, FM, satellite radio, satellite TV, Internet and telephone-based 
content 
distribution - without cuts elsewhere (sound familiar?). He called it a "silent 
but ever-growing 
burden of a burgeoning distribution methodologies portfolio."

He talks about the complexity of systems engineers must administer; declining 
financial 
resources; a disorganized, incoherent Network Control Center; and lack of a 
solid business 
continuity/disaster plan.

Poignantly, he described a shift in job skill relevance among engineers as 
BBG´s 
dependence on shortwave shifts to third-party operations, satellite and other 
platforms. "This 
issue is further compounded by the relatively difficult transition from a 
traditional RF, antenna, 
transmitter design and maintenance knowledge base to the technologies involved 
in digital 
satellite and IP-based networking systems."

He also identified a problem of low morale among engineers, calling the mood 
"palpable."

Meantime, while the IT side "manages to deliver a relatively high level of 
service," he 
identified multiple single points of failure in critical IT infrastructure; 
poor layout and 
maintenance; "nonexistent" business continuity and disaster recovery plans; and 
other 
issues.

He wrote that the organization´s network was dependent on a single 
enterprise-class Cisco 
core router whose failure would "severely cripple the entire agency" for an 
extended period. 
He provided photos as evidence that "the cabling infrastructure that supports 
the BBG 
network is in serious disarray," criticized past decisions regarding the 
agency´s e-mail 
platform and spoke of "blurry lines of responsibility, finger pointing, morale 
issues and lower 
overall performance" in IT.

Overall, and without accusing individuals, he wrote that various circumstances 
had created 
an "organizational insularity" at IBB that called for a rejuvenation.

Playing catchup

On a broad level, he recommended that the organization consolidate platforms.

"In the engineering arena, this approach will be mostly focused on the usage of 
shortwave 
and the pragmatic analysis of its expected lifespan and overall scope of global 
operations but 
also will include continued migration to MPEG-4 compression technology and 
steady 
introduction of IP transmission protocols. In the IT arena, this process will 
endeavor to quickly 
reduce the number of computing and storage platforms."

He recommended use of server, storage and networking virtualization. He said 
BBG should 
colocate systems into data centers with multiple redundancy layers, and 
eventually migrate 
much of its application portfolio into cloud computing; he pointed out that BBG 
is already 
using the cloud in some applications.

He also laid out operational recommendations, starting in the first year with 
changing the 
name of the Office of Engineering and Technical Services (to Technology, 
Services and 
Innovation); setting up a new tech management structure; creating an 
application and 
database to manage transmission and content distribution assets; and creating a 
Security, 
Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery Office.

He called for continued migration to MPEG-4 content encoding; an upgrade of the 
Network 
Control Center; outsourcing of station operations in Bangkok and Udorn in 
Thailand; and 
applying what they learn from that outsourcing to other shortwave operations. 
He 
recommended a big IT consolidation effort; fixing IT wiring; eliminating single 
points of failure; 
implementing a hosted e-mail, IM, conferencing and Blackberry server system; 
and 
expanding the use of internal intranet sites.

It´s not clear how many of his goals, if adopted, were accomplished in the last 
12 months. He 
also laid out broader goals for the second year.

Slow sunset

I never met Andre' V. Mendes; indeed I learned while writing my online article 
that he is a 
former contributor to Radio World´s sister publication TV Technology. But based 
on my 
limited exposure to the subject, his report seems an intelligent discussion of 
real problems.

I can imagine he upset some apple carts. Who wants photos of their bad wiring 
spread 
around the Internet? And whether Mendes and the staff have the chops to change 
an 
entrenched technology culture embedded within a federal bureaucracy is hard to 
predict.

As far as shortwave, Mendes did recommend that the organization create a 
strategy to 
"sunset" SW operations.

I think the term "sunset" is misleading because it suggests a finality that the 
report doesn´t 
recommend. Mendes told me in a subsequent e-mail that shortwave "will remain an 
important medium for the BBG where it is a viable one, but its use will be 
driven by audience 
habits and the relative costs of transmission."

However, it´s noteworthy that a top technical executive is using that language, 
and it shows 
the direction BBG management is likely to continue.

Expect more reductions of BBG-owned SW facilities; more outsourcing; more 
sharing of 
resources with other broadcasters; and/or more leasing of capacity from third 
parties. If 
you´re interested in the fate of U.S. shortwave, all the more reason to read 
his report, which 
concluded among other things that "the decision process for station closing 
does not appear 
to follow an overt decision and stated plan to reduce shortwave usage."

You can read it in PDF format; visit governmentattic.org, key phrase BBG 
Technology. Note 
that it is followed by separate earlier information about the organization´s 
technology and new 
media efforts.Standard rig : ICOM R75 / 2x16 V / m@h40 heads Sennheiser 
Please read and distribute this 15 year research article 
http://tinyurl.com/5vzg7e 
Please read my article on SINPO at http://tinyurl.com/yt7qjd
________________________
http://zlgr.multiply.com (radio monitoring site plus audio clips ) MAIN SITE 
http://www.delicious.com/gr_greek1/@zach (all mypages !!)
........
Zacharias Liangas , Thessaloniki Greece 
greekdx @ otenet dot gr  ---  
Pesawat penerima: ICOM R75 , Lowe HF150 , Degen 1102,1103,108,
Tecsun PL200/550, Chibo c300/c979, Yupi 7000 
Antenna: 16m hor, 2x16 m V invert, 1m australian loop 


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