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[[Category:CZ Authors|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]
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''Howard C. Berkowitz is no longer a member of this project''
[[Category:CZ Editors|Berkowitz, Howard C.]][[Category:Computers Authors|Berkowitz, Howard C.]] [[Category:Computers Editors|Berkowitz, Howard C.]] [[Category:Engineering Authors|Berkowitz, Howard C.]] [[Category:Engineering Editors|Berkowitz, Howard C.]] [[Category:Military Authors|Berkowitz, Howard C.]] [[Category:Military Editors|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]  
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[[Category:Infectious Disease Members|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]
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[[Category:Nuclear Engineering Members|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]
[[Category:International Relations Members|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]
[[Category:Trauma medicine Members|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]
[[Category:Gastroenterology Members|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]
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[[Category:Pain management Members|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]
[[Category:Hematology Members|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]
[[Category:Oncology Members|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]
[[Category:Neurology Members|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]
[[Category:Nephrology Members|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]
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[[Category:Surgery Members|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]
[[Category:Security Members|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]
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[[Category:Japan Members|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]
[[Category:CZ Editors|Berkowitz, Howard C.]][[Category:Computers Authors|Berkowitz, Howard C.]] [[Category:Computers Editors|Berkowitz, Howard C.]] [[Category:Engineering Authors|Berkowitz, Howard C.]] [[Category:Military Authors|Berkowitz, Howard C.]] [[Category:CZ Editorial Council Members|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]
[[Category:Editor members starting a 2010 term|Berkowitz, Howard C.]]-->
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'''Yes, I know I should be using the workgroup status system. It hates me. I can write articles faster than I can get them into that system. .'''  This is not a full list of my contributions; I've found it easier to write than catalog. In penance, however, do take a look at the ongoing discussions at [[CZ Talk:Usability]] regarding some organizational techniques.


Professionally, I do network engineering and medical information systems, but am increasingly involved in electronics for commercial fishing (http://www.beachwerks.com), which, in turn, is leading to proposing some renewable biodiesel work, although I'm likely to be returning to building very big networks.  When Aleta referred to one of those topics as "not [[rocket science]]", I felt compelled to write that article, although I'm stuck in not knowing how to format some equations.
[[Image:H-R-S2.png|thumb|left|350px|With some of my staff...Sweet in tuxedo and Rhonda in furs]]
Over my protests regarding due process and Charter violations, I have been stripped of my Politics and History Editorships, simultaneously with statements that my large number of criticism in these areas are not being criticized. At the best, I believe the Editorial Council is overly concerned with credentialism rather than actual knowledge. I also seriously question the EC's essentially stopping all other business and content work other than focusing on my Editorships, based on an anonymous complaint, and not having experts in any of these disciplines making determinations of expertise.


After many years in the Washington DC area, I am now in a fishing village on Cape Cod. As Monty Python would have it, it is far more productive to look at fishing there than in the middle of the Sahara. The biodiesel proposal is an elegant little concept of having seafood caught by diesel-powered fishing vessels, fried by local restaurants, whose waste vegetable oil comes back to our facility, and is converted into mixed biodiesel to go back into the boats.  
{{Usertime-text|Howard}}{{Template:Utc|-5}}
==CZ Governance and Editor Qualifications==
With the passage of an Editorial Council resolution on making public one's qualifications to be an Editor, I will attempt to do so here, as well as the required [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz/Editor|Editor Subpage]] I only ask, especially while I am getting feedback on the way I present it, that people trying to understand my background read the full user page, and also understand that much of my relevant experience is interdisciplinary and sometimes nontraditional.


In the networking realm, I've long been a participant in communications standards, passing knowledge forward in writing and teaching, developing routing and network management products, and architecting a good number of large service provider and enterprise networks. Published four books, author/coauthor of several [[Internet Engineering Task Force]] RFCs and many more drafts, dozens of industry presentations, including tutorials on routing for the [[North American Network Operators Group]] (http://nanog.org/authors.html). Worked for several years at Nortel, starting as Product Line Manager for Carrier Routing Protocols, and then moving into the corporate research lab as Senior Advisor on IP Routing. Was an invited speaker for the Internet Society meeting in Stockholm, discussing the limits of the Internet routing system.
I don't think anyone can be a CZ Editor without a thorough understanding of both the subject and the CZ environment. In my opinion, one of the fundamental ways to determine both is to look at the content contributions of the individual as an author, even before Editor status is granted. In a substantial part of at least American (U.S. and Canada), many institutions recognize nontraditional learning through the presentation of a "portfolio" in the subject, and perhaps interviews with subject specialists.  I'm not especially a traditional learner, but I'm certainly willing to demonstrate competence. ''Bear with me as I work on the best way to present my best work, especially since much is interdisciplinary.'' I'm certainly not suggesting I wrote every article in the workgroup/subgroup, although I do believe I have several  '''+++ entries below represent a hierarchy of articles; the top is listed.'''


Until the mania for easy-to-test industry certifications took away the enjoyable parts of teaching other than the test, was a certified instructor for Cisco, primarily teaching Internetwork Design. My specialties include fault tolerance, routing and router design, and network management, plus applications in fields including telecommunications/Internet service provision, military systems, and medicine.
*[[CZ: History Workgroup]]
**[[Vietnam wars]]: I reorganized and extended the Vietnam material, which was limited and American-centric when I started.
**[[CZ: Pacific War Subgroup]]
**[[CZ: Nazism Subgroup]]
*Politics workgroup
**[[Extrajudicial detention]]
**[[Interrogation]]
***[[Intelligence interrogation, U.S.]]
****Intelligence interrogation]]
**[[Extraordinary rendition]]
**[[Torture]]
*Computers workgroup
**[[Domain Name System]]
*Engineering workgroup
**[[Tool]]
**[[Vessel monitoring system]]
**[[Global Maritime Distress and Safety System]]
*Military workgroup
**AN/
**[[Command and control]]
**Intelligence cycle management
***Intelligence analysis
****Cognitive traps for intelligence analysis
**[[Electronic warfare]]
**[[Warship]]
***[[Destroyer]]
***[[Cruiser]]


Perhaps not surprisingly, network-centric computing has kept me intertwined with military and intelligence matters (see [[C3I-ISR]] for some attempt to keep the alphabet soup under control). Especially in my earlier career, this meshed with my background in microbial biochemistry, so I continue (also wearing the emergency management hat) with WMD, but also technology and social science support to special operations. For example, during Vietnam, I worked for several contractors, academic and commercial, dealing with tactical sensors, assessment of counterinsurgency, etc., and had a good deal of training in intelligence analysis. Later on, I was a technical contributor to national-level C3I network architecture. I've also had the benefit of some mentoring by colleagues through flag officer level in C3I.  
==Useful Forum links==
*[http://forum.citizendium.org/index.php/topic,3065.0.html Purpose of lemma articles]
*[http://forum.citizendium.org/index.php/topic,3311.0.html Diacritics in page titles]
*[http://forum.citizendium.org/index.php/topic,654.0.html Are foreign characters problematic?]
*[http://forum.citizendium.org/index.php/topic,3040.0.html University encyclopedia project]


In medicine, to paraphrase from an old US television commercial, I'm not a physician but simulate them on computers. While I was a user of ''Index Medicus'' before MEDLINE on computers, my first professional work on medical computing was manager and chief developer of clinical computing to the Georgetown University Hospital, an outsourced company, Washington Reference Laboratories, owned by the head of clinical chemistry, Dr. Martin Rubin. I continue consulting work on the products of http://www.aionex.com and have two patents in progress.  While it's hard to put into formal terms, I'm passionate about pharmacology -- what other sort of person nags his mother for a ''Merck Index of Chemicals and Drugs'' for his 10th birthday?
==Who am I?==
I was born shortly after what I prefer to call Big Mistake Two, as a means of avoiding the WWII, Second World War, World War Two, Great Patriotic War, etc., arguments. :-< Specifically, I was born in Newark, New Jersey. For those that do not know the New Jersey suburbs of the greater New York areas, at the time, many of the stories of them being a massive chemical waste dump have at least some truth. In respect to the philosophers at CZ, it is fair to say that Nietzsche may have had Newark in mind with "what does not destroy me makes me the stronger."
[[Image:Mr. Clark.jpg|left|200px|thumb|Mr. Clark (1997-2010), much missed best friend, senior editorial adviser, expert in nursing, food, pets, Buddhism, food, pet therapy, food and raising 2- and 4-legged kittens]]
Right there, you see my endorsement of a saying in the [[Royal Navy]]: "if you can't take a joke, you shouldn't have joined."  At this point, it seems appropriate to give credit to my editorial advisers, Rhonda and the late, dearly missed Mr. Clark, my best friend.


Before I discovered I wasn't cut out to be a bench biochemist, my undergraduate research was on "Competitive inhibition of penicillinase by notalysin, a ''Penicillium notatum'' (Westling strain, ATCC 10108) metabolite"; it might have been an early  variant of something like clavulanic acid. I started that research proposal while in high school; I had the luck to start getting mentoring from a physician/biochemist and an academic microbiologist, and it probably was just as well that my mother did not know all of what was in my basement lab. No, no explosives, just pathogens -- I later did make some improvised things that went *bang*, but that was under guidance while a contractor working with U.S. Army Special Forces.
Professionally, I do network engineering, information secuity, and medical information systems, but am increasingly involved in electronics for commercial fishing (http://www.beachwerks.com), which, in turn, is leading to proposing some renewable biodiesel work, although I'm likely to be returning to building very big networks.  When Aleta referred to one of those topics as "not [[rocket science]]", I felt compelled to write that article, although I'm stuck in not knowing how to format some equations.  Some of my current consulting work deals with the security aspects of [[cloud computing]] and the [[Federal Information Security Management Act of 2002]] (FISMA).
[[Image:Rhonda-full.jpg|right|250px|thumb||Rhonda, editorial adviser and expert in marketing, fashion, dog training, social networking and party planning, and possibly world domination in a benevolent way]]
After many years in the Washington DC area, I am now in a fishing village on Cape Cod. As Monty Python would have it, it is far more productive to look at fishing there than in the middle of the Sahara. I am a member of the Barnstable County Medical Reserve Corps, and have been trying to get support for a biodiesel proposal: an elegant little concept of having seafood caught by diesel-powered fishing vessels, fried by local restaurants, whose waste vegetable oil comes back to our facility, and is converted into mixed biodiesel to go back into the boats.  


Somewhat bridging networking and medicine, I've been involved, in a number of ways, in emergency management, ranging from medical disaster plan development and support, to work with the [[Incident Command System]], and having a number of distance learning certificates from the [[Federal Emergency Management Agency]].
In the networking realm, I've long been a participant in communications standards, passing knowledge forward in writing and teaching, developing routing and network management products, and architecting a good number of large service provider and enterprise networks.  Published four books, author/coauthor of several [[Internet Engineering Task Force]] RFCs and many more drafts, dozens of industry presentations, including tutorials on routing for the North American Network Operators Group (http://nanog.org/authors.html). Worked for several years at Nortel, starting as Product Line Manager for Carrier Routing Protocols, and then moving into the corporate research lab as Senior Advisor on IP Routing. Was an invited speaker for the Internet Society meeting in Stockholm, discussing the limits of the Internet routing system.


At Citizendium, my areas of contribution are principally in military and intelligence areas, and, with great pleasure, I am again writing in one of my main professional areas, computer network engineering, which simply had become too painful at Wikipedia. I also wwrit health sciences, particularly in regard to clinical computing and medical information management.  Occasionally, I will join miscellaneous topics of interest such as cooking, maritime computing and electronics, commercial fishing, and journalism.
Until the mania for easy-to-test industry certifications took away the enjoyable parts of teaching other than the test, was a certified instructor for Cisco, primarily teaching Internetwork Design.  My specialties include fault tolerance, routing and router design, and network management, plus applications in fields including telecommunications/Internet service provision, military systems, and medicine.  


==My quick references==
Perhaps not surprisingly, network-centric computing has kept me intertwined with military and intelligence matters (see [[C3I-ISR]] for some attempt to keep the alphabet soup under control). Especially in my earlier career, this meshed with my background in microbial biochemistry, so I continue (also wearing the emergency management hat) with WMD, but also technology and social science support to special operations. For example, during Vietnam, I worked for several contractors, academic and commercial, dealing with tactical sensors, assessment of counterinsurgency, etc., and had a good deal of training in intelligence analysis. Later on, I was a technical contributor to national-level C3I network architecture. I've also had the benefit of some mentoring by colleagues through flag officer level in C3I.
===Disambiguation page===
<nowiki>{{dabhdr|foo}}


{{r|foo-meaning-1}}
At Citizendium, my areas of contribution are principally in military and intelligence areas, which combine Military, History, Politics, Engineering and Computers. With great pleasure, I am again writing in one of my main professional areas, computer network engineering, which simply had become too painful at Wikipedia. I also contribute to health sciences, particularly in regard to clinical computing and medical information management.  Occasionally, I will join miscellaneous topics of interest such as cooking, maritime computing and electronics (part of my current business), commercial fishing, and journalism.
==Military, intelligence, history and politics==
'"These pertain to my qualifications as a '''Military, <s>History</s> and Politics Editor'''.  In direct support of that, I also mention the large number of articles that I have contributed to CZ, and are readily available for review.  I will continue to protest the revocation of the History editorship.


{{r|foo-meaning-2}}
While growing up, I rarely blew up things, preferring the more subtle threat of bacteriology. My mother, an Army reserve officer, did bring home assorted Field Manuals that would shock US Homeland Security.


{{disambig}}
As a network engineer, I have had substantial exposure to military command, control, communications and intelligence. Some of my consulting is in open source intelligence dealing with counterinsurgency and [[terrorism]].
</nowiki>
===Table===
Firefox 3 doesn't support a good many icons in the editor. So...
<nowiki>
{| class="wikitable"
<center>'''Title if used DNS'''</center>
|-
! Column 1 Header
! Column 2 Header
! Column 3 Header
|-
| Row 1, Column 1
| Row 1, Column 2
| Row 1, Column 3
|-
| Row 2, Column 1
| Row 2, Column 2
| Row 2, Column 3
|-
| Row 3, Column 1
| Row 3, Column 2
| Row 3, Column 3
|}
</nowiki>


==General engineering==
In addition to military command and control, and participating in gaming and simulation (venues including the Industrial College of the Armed Forces), I've had a certain amount of exposure to intelligence research and analysis, and occasionally do open source intelligence consulting. Some of my graduate work was in strategic intelligence analysis at the School of International Service, American University.
{{r|Form factor}}


{{r|Modulation}}
War is hell. Still, there are moments that show the best of human virtues, such as [[Guy Gabaldon]] and [[Ben Salomon]]. I've written in excess of 2000 military-related articles here, many of which blur into politics, international relations style.
{{r|Amplitude modulation}}
===Military planning, intelligence analysis, social science and history===
{{r|Frequency modulation}}
'''Interdisciplinary alert: Military, History, Politics'''. These are extremely intertwined issues for the practitioner.


{{r|EU-NATO-US frequency bands}}
===The practice of politics===
{{r|IEEE frequency bands}}
While the Workgroup system may  not always be with us, I observe it is the Politics Workgroup rather than the Political Science Workgroup. I've had substantial experience in political campaigning, internals of poltical process, lobbying and preparing testimony.  While some of my work was with what was then the [[Republican Party (United States)]], I can only claim that the party ethos was considerably different than it is today, when "moderate Republican" is the moral equivalent of "slightly pregnant."  If I may use 12-step terms, I am a Recovering Republican, who still graduated from the Republican Senior Campaign Management School and was on campaign staffs, including the DC Nixon Campaign in 1972. I spent several years as Research Director for the District of Columbia (state-equivalent) Republican Committee and DC Young Republicans. For the Ripon Society, a moderate Republican policy group, I contributed to Congressional testimony on government secrecy and on Congressional representation for the District of Columbia. Representing [[Young Americans for Freedom]], I debated [[Tom Charles Huston]] on the constitutionality and practicality of the "[[Huston Plan]]" for domestic surveillance and political provocation during the second Nixon Administration.
{{r|ITU frequency bands}}


{{r|Radio}}
With the capture of the Republican Party by social conservatives, I was no longer actively affiliated, but continued to be involved in local politics, often nonpartisan, in Arlington County, Virginia. I am involved in a variety of serious discussion forums and mailing lists, often shared with elected and appointed officials.
{{r|Software-defined radio}}
===History===
{{r|Superheterodyne}}
As [[George Santayana]] put it, "those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it."  When the first recognizable [[military staff]] function was created, circa 1657, in Prussia, the very first role defined was the staff historian.  <ref>Walter Goerlitz, ''History of the German General Staff, 1657-1945''</ref>  History, and more recently social science, have been an integral part since to the military planning process and the separate development of national intelligence.


{{r|Radar}}
Intelligence analysis routinely draws on historical and social science analysis.  Perhaps the greatest difference between intelligence analysis and academic history is that the analyst may be under unbreakable deadlines to provide information to policymakers, and the report ("estimate") delivered has to contain uncertainties. A good report makes the uncertainties clear, although sadly, it is not the case that the policymakers will read, understand, and use them. A bad report will allow itself to be tailored to what the policymaker wants to hear (e.g., [[Office of Special Plans]]).
{{r|Bistatic}}
{{r|Multistatic}}


==Network engineering==
Precisely due to time and other pressures, analysts are, as much as academic specialists, aware of the need for quality, and watch for cognitive traps for intelligence analysis.


My experience with communications standards goes back to the mid-seventies, variously with ISO/CCITT and ANSI to start, especially in network performance. I worked for GTE for a time, and had a good deal of exposure to the internals of telephone networks. As a member of the Federal Telecommunications Standards Committee (1976-1980), I got in at the beginning of what was to become OSI, and also got interested in survivable communications systems, including the (US) National Communications Systems and military networks intended to operate under the most extreme conditions. Those extremes tended to be that the network really needed to operate for 20 minutes or so, but you never knew when the 20 minutes would start, and would just have to cope with network elements randomly turning into mushroom clouds. This tied in with a lifelong interest in politicomilitary history.  
An example of one of my open source intelligence (OSINT) assignments that blended historical and military affairs was at the Center for Research in Social Systems (formerly the Special Operations Research Office), a Federal Contract Research Center run by American University in Washington, DC. This is long enough ago that client and national security confidentiality no longer apply. The primary client was the [[United States Army]], especially [[United States Army Special Forces]]. I analyzed consecutive translations of the North Vietnamese party news journal, ''Nhan Dan'', and its theoretical journal, ''Hoc Tap''.  My task was to identify possible changes in policy both at the national level during the [[Vietnam War]], but also of individual policymakers.  Often, the policy change was not explicitly stated, but would be based on citing approval or disapproval of the acts of individuals in Vietnamese history. Policymakers on both sides of a decision might couch their arguments in terms of agreement or disagreement with a famous past monarch such as [[Nguyen Hue]], just as we knew that the "Nguyen Hue Offensive" in captured documents was something serious -- it became the Tet Offensive.


The FTSC and National Communications System contributed, in the late seventies, to the ANSI Distributed Systems (DISY) architecture, which was a significant input into the OSI architecture. ISO 7498, the basic OSI Reference Model (OSIRM), was published in 1984. Even ignoring the eventual dominance of Internet protocols, there is a great deal of misunderstanding about OSI, because educators generally ignored supplemental ISO documents that clarified ISO 7498.
It's much more difficult to talk about recent assignments in OSINT.  The best I can say about one, for example, is that I studied the history and economics of infrastructure development in a country that has been been supportive of terrorists, in order to predict where they might locate bases and where they might have their own critical infrastructure. Hyoothetically, the existence of [[informal value transfer system]]s gives one a key to where to collect [[financial intelligence]].


From 1986 to 1991, I was the first technical staff member at the Corporation for Open Systems, a not-for-profit industry research center for promoting and testing OSI and ISDN protocols. In addition to secretariat work with the various committees, I managed teams working on FTAM and X.25 test systems, and contributed to IEEE 802 test systems. One memorable experience was lecturing about X.25 testing in Japan, and had the horrible realization that my PowerPoint slides, translated into Japanese, had gotten into a different order than my English-language notes.
==Health Sciences and Emergency Medicine==
In medicine, to paraphrase from an old US television commercial, I'm not a physician but simulate them on computers. While I was a user of ''Index Medicus'' before MEDLINE on computers, my first professional work on medical computing was manager and chief developer of clinical computing to the Georgetown University Hospital, an outsourced company, Washington Reference Laboratories, owned by the head of clinical chemistry, Dr. Martin Rubin. I continue consulting work on the products of http://www.aionex.com and have two patents in progress. While it's hard to put into formal terms, I'm passionate about pharmacology -- what other sort of person nags his mother for a ''Merck Index of Chemicals and Drugs'' for his 10th birthday?
==Phamacology and public health==
Before I discovered I wasn't cut out to be a bench biochemist, my undergraduate research was on "Competitive inhibition of penicillinase by notalysin, a ''Penicillium notatum'' (Westling strain, ATCC 10108) metabolite"; it might have been an early  variant of something like clavulanic acid. I started that research proposal while in high school; I had the luck to start getting mentoring from a physician/biochemist and an academic microbiologist, and it probably was just as well that my mother did not know all of what was in my basement lab. No, no explosives, just pathogens -- I later did make some improvised things that went *bang*, but that was under guidance while a contractor working with [[U.S. Army Special Forces]].  


For around six years of my life, I explained how OSI was the answer, but eventually realized I didn't know the question.  
Still, I keep up with relevant literature in infectious diseases and antibiotics. My budget, one of these days, will have room again for the [[American Public Health Association]].
==Medical informatics and decision systems==
'''Interdisciplinary alert: computers and health sciences'''


===Network engineering: Citizendium contributions and proposed schemas===
The Georgetown work started in 1970, and has continued. Among my more recent work is contributing to the architecture of the nursing workflow management system produced by [http://www.aionex.com Aionex]. I am working with several primary physicians to improve their office charting and [[electronic medical record]]s, as well as electronic prescribing.
====Created article====
==Emergency management and medicine==
(redlinks may be placeholders for WP content, or for something I will originate here)
Somewhat bridging Engineering, Computers and medicine, I've been involved, in a number of ways, in emergency management, ranging from medical disaster plan development and support, to work with the [[Incident Command System]], and having a number of distance learning certificates from the [[Federal Emergency Management Agency]].
{{rpl|Computer networking reference models}}
{{rpl|Locality of networks}}
{{rpl|Value of networks}}


{{rpl|Anycast}}
{{rpl|Unicasting}}
{{rpl|Multihoming}}


{{rpl|Autonomous system}}
We've really not defined a workgroup for emergency management, so I've been using Engineering; and created [[CZ: Emergency management Subgroup]]. Firefighting, aviation and aviation safety, marine navigation and safety, rescue, etc. into the Engineering Workgroup.
{{rpl|Border Gateway Protocol}}


{{rpl|Computer networking application protocols}}
I am a member of the [[Cape Cod Medical Reserve Corps]].
{{rpl|Post Office Protocol version 3}} (POP3)
==General engineering==
{{rpl|Simple Mail Transfer Protocol}} (SMTP)
It's often an interesting question on what goes into the Engineering Workgroup. So far, I've tended to put things regarding [[form factor|generic equipment packaging]], [[incident command system]] emergency management, etc., into it. There are enough similarity among engineering disciplines, at least where I have been an approving Editor, that makes it possible to look for good engineering-oriented explanation even if I'm not an expert in the subdiscipline.
{{rpl|Voice over Internet Protocol}}


{{rpl|Computer networking end-to-end protocols}}
==Network engineering==
{{rpl|Transmission Control Protocol}}
{{rpl|User Datagram Protocol}}


{{rpl|Computer networking internetwork protocols}}
My experience with communications standards goes back to the mid-seventies, variously with ISO/CCITT and ANSI to start, especially in network performance. I worked for GTE for a time, and had a good deal of exposure to the internals of telephone networks. As a member of the Federal Telecommunications Standards Committee (1976-1980), I got in at the beginning of what was to become OSI, and also got interested in survivable communications systems, including the (US) National Communications Systems and military networks intended to operate under the most extreme conditions. Those extremes tended to be that the network really needed to operate for 20 minutes or so, but you never knew when the 20 minutes would start, and would just have to cope with network elements randomly turning into mushroom clouds.  This tied in with a lifelong interest in politicomilitary history.
 
===Open Systems Interconnection===
{{rpl|Computer networking session protocols}}
The FTSC and National Communications System contributed, in the late seventies, to the ANSI Distributed Systems (DISY) architecture, which was a significant input into the OSI architecture. ISO 7498, the basic OSI Reference Model (OSIRM), was published in 1984. Even ignoring the eventual dominance of Internet protocols, there is a great deal of misunderstanding about OSI, because educators generally ignored supplemental ISO documents that clarified ISO 7498.
{{rpl|Computer networking media attachment protocols}}
{{rpl|Computer networking media sharing protocols}}
 
{{rpl|Form factor}}
 
{{rpl|Domain Name System}}
{{rpl|Domain Name System security}}
 
{{rpl|Internet Protocol}}
{{rpl|Address registry}}
{{rpl|Internet Protocol version 4}}
{{rpl|Internet Protocol version 6}}
{{rpl|Internet Protocol version 6 addressing}}
{{rpl|Internet Protocol version 6 deployment}}
 
{{rpl|Routing protocols}}
{{rpl|Open Shortest Path First}}
{{rpl|Intermediate System-Intermediate System}}
 
{{rpl|Router}}
{{rpl|Routing}}
{{rpl|Routing information base}}
{{rpl|Control plane}}
{{rpl|Forwarding information base}}+
{{rpl|Forwarding plane}}+
 
====Contributed to article====
{{rpl|Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model}}
{{rpl|Protocol (computer)|}


From 1986 to 1991, I was the first technical staff member at the Corporation for Open Systems, a not-for-profit industry research center for promoting and testing OSI and ISDN protocols. In addition to secretariat work with the various committees, I managed teams working on FTAM and X.25 test systems, and contributed to IEEE 802 test systems. One memorable experience was lecturing about X.25 testing in Japan, and had the horrible realization that my PowerPoint slides, translated into Japanese, had gotten into a different order than my English-language notes.


For around six years of my life, I explained how OSI was the answer, but eventually realized I didn't know the question.
===The moving hand writes on the wall: "it's about IP, stupid"===
===The moving hand writes on the wall: "it's about IP, stupid"===


By the early nineties, it was obvious that Internet protocols were indeed the answer, and I started to play in the [[Internet Engineering Task Force]] (IETF), [[North American Network Operators Group]] (NANOG)and the [[Internet Research Task Force]] (IRTF).  
By the early nineties, it was obvious that Internet protocols were indeed the answer, and I started to play in the [[Internet Engineering Task Force]] (IETF), North American Network Operators Group  (NANOG)and the [[Internet Research Task Force]] (IRTF).  


In the IETF, my main work has been in the Routing (especially BGP/IDR and OSPF) and Operations & Management Areas (especially BMWG & OPSEC), and, more as a lurker, Security and Real-time Applications & Infrastructure Area. I am an author or coauthor of RFC 1912, RFC 2071<ref> {{Citation
In the IETF, my main work has been in the Routing (especially BGP/IDR and OSPF) and Operations & Management Areas (especially BMWG & OPSEC), and, more as a lurker, Security and Real-time Applications & Infrastructure Area. I am an author or coauthor of RFC 1912, RFC 2071<ref> {{Citation
Line 199: Line 211:
=== The Truth about Network Reference Models ===
=== The Truth about Network Reference Models ===


There is a continuing and frustrating tendency, in Wikipedia articles on network architecture, to treat the OSI model as if it is still used other than as a teaching aid, and to try to “coerce” (using the lovely word choice of my colleague, Priscilla Oppenheimer) Internet Protocol Suite protocols into OSI layers. Layering, as an abstraction, is useful up to a point. It can be overused. An updated IETF architectural document, RFC3439, <ref> {{Citation
There is a continuing and frustrating tendency, in Wikipedia articles on network architecture, to treat the Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model as if it is still used other than as a teaching aid, and to try to “coerce” (using the lovely word choice of my colleague, Priscilla Oppenheimer) Internet Protocol Suite protocols into OSI layers. Layering, as an abstraction, is useful up to a point. It can be overused. An updated IETF architectural document, RFC3439, <ref> {{Citation
   | first1 = R.
   | first1 = R.
   | last1 = Bush
   | last1 = Bush
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</ref>and no IETF document, as opposed to some nonauthoritative textbooks, say it has five.
</ref>and no IETF document, as opposed to some nonauthoritative textbooks, say it has five.


No [[IETF]] standards-track document has accepted a five-layer model, and IETF documents indeed deprecate strict layering of all sorts. Given the lack of acceptance of the five-layer model by the body with technical responsibility for the protocol suite, it is not unreasonable to regard five-layer presentations as teaching aids, possibly to make the IP suite architecture more familiar to those students who were first exposed to layering using the [[OSI model]]. Comparisons between the IP and OSI suites can give some insight into the abstraction of layering, but trying to coerce Internet protocols, not designed with OSI in mind, can only lead to confusion.
No [[IETF]] standards-track document has accepted a five-layer model, and IETF documents indeed deprecate strict layering of all sorts. Given the lack of acceptance of the five-layer model by the body with technical responsibility for the protocol suite, it is not unreasonable to regard five-layer presentations as teaching aids, possibly to make the IP suite architecture more familiar to those students who were first exposed to layering using the [[Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model]]. Comparisons between the IP and OSI suites can give some insight into the abstraction of layering, but trying to coerce Internet protocols, not designed with OSI in mind, can only lead to confusion.


Again, RFC1122 defines 4 layers. If anyone can find another IETF document that states the OSI model is followed, please cite it. Further, RFC 1122 was published in 1989, while the OSI Reference Model, ISO 7498, was published in 1984.  If the RFC 1122 authors had wanted to be OSI compliant, they had the OSI definitions available to them. They didn't use them. Does that suggest they were not concerned with OSI compliance?
Again, RFC1122 defines 4 layers. If anyone can find another IETF document that states the Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model is followed, please cite it. Further, RFC 1122 was published in 1989, while the OSI Reference Model, ISO 7498, was published in 1984.  If the RFC 1122 authors had wanted to be OSI compliant, they had the OSI definitions available to them. They didn't use them. Does that suggest they were not concerned with OSI compliance?


For Internet Protocol Suite architecture, textbooks are not authoritative; the IETF's work, particularly the Standards Track, is definitive for the Internet Protocol Suite. I've written networking textbooks, and, while I might clarify an IETF document, I certainly don't contend that textbooks are more definitive than the actual technical specifications created by expert, not beginning student or teacher, consensus.
For Internet Protocol Suite architecture, textbooks are not authoritative; the IETF's work, particularly the Standards Track, is definitive for the Internet Protocol Suite. I've written networking textbooks, and, while I might clarify an IETF document, I certainly don't contend that textbooks are more definitive than the actual technical specifications created by expert, not beginning student or teacher, consensus.
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There is a great deal of valuable information on networking at Wikipedia. There is also a great deal of misinformation, partially due to networking experts leaving in frustration with the process of having authoritative definitions constantly changed by editors who found their high school or college textbook conflicted with primary sources or direct experience in developing networks and primary sources.
There is a great deal of valuable information on networking at Wikipedia. There is also a great deal of misinformation, partially due to networking experts leaving in frustration with the process of having authoritative definitions constantly changed by editors who found their high school or college textbook conflicted with primary sources or direct experience in developing networks and primary sources.


I'm one of those people. while I'll certainly stay involved in my profession, I've found the frustration of working with Wikipedia on serious network architecture is simply no fun at all. One of the most important real-world issues is that in terms of real-world products and networks, the "7-layer" [[Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model‎]] from the [[International Organization for Standardization]] is dead, and the less formal architectural models primarily associated with the [[Internet Engineering Task Force]] (IETF) and the [[Institute for Electrical and Electronic Engineers]] (IEEE) actually define what is done. Unfortunately, most introductory courses and books on networking keep the OSI model as a key part of their presentations, much as, I suppose, Dr. Frankenstein kept his undead monster alive.
I'm one of those people. while I'll certainly stay involved in my profession, I've found the frustration of working with Wikipedia on serious network architecture is simply no fun at all. One of the most important real-world issues is that in terms of real-world products and networks, the "7-layer" [[Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model‎]] from the [[International Organization for Standardization]] is dead, and the less formal architectural models primarily associated with the [[Internet Engineering Task Force]] (IETF) and the [[Institute for Electrical and Electronic Engineers]] (IEEE) actually define what is done. Unfortunately, most introductory courses and books on networking keep the Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model as a key part of their presentations, much as, I suppose, Dr. Frankenstein kept his undead monster alive.


If people want to keep insisting that IETF protocols must fit into the OSI reference model, if protocol payloads must be of layer N+1 if their payload is management (e.g., routing) for layer N, that there are five layers in the Internet reference model, may they enjoy themselves. It's not even that I've tried to impose an IP-centric view, although I have linked RFCs specifically saying that strict layering is considered harmful and RFC 1122 chose to ignore ISO 7498; I've even cited more detailed ISO documents -- but people want to keep insisting their incorrect textbooks are more authoritative, or "explain" to me about protocol encapsulation and layering.  
If people want to keep insisting that IETF protocols must fit into the OSI reference model, if protocol payloads must be of layer N+1 if their payload is management (e.g., routing) for layer N, that there are five layers in the Internet reference model, may they enjoy themselves. It's not even that I've tried to impose an IP-centric view, although I have linked RFCs specifically saying that strict layering is considered harmful and RFC 1122 chose to ignore ISO 7498; I've even cited more detailed ISO documents -- but people want to keep insisting their incorrect textbooks are more authoritative, or "explain" to me about protocol encapsulation and layering.  
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   | location = New York  
   | location = New York  
   | isbn = 0471099228}}</ref>.  My general sense is that vendor-independent traditional engineering books have a limited market, and I've been concentrating more on online publications. In the past, I've been involved in preparation for Cisco certifications, and still participate in mailing lists.
   | isbn = 0471099228}}</ref>.  My general sense is that vendor-independent traditional engineering books have a limited market, and I've been concentrating more on online publications. In the past, I've been involved in preparation for Cisco certifications, and still participate in mailing lists.
==Military and intelligence: Citizendium contributions and proposed schemas==
I'll try to categorize these by the most relevant workgroup, although certain areas, especially intelligence, don't neatly match to a workgroup. +denotes articles where I was the primary author or ongoing editor at Wikipedia. Further below, I discuss my background and interests in the major fields.
===Intelligence===
While I started out calling many military, it's just as appropriate, with many, to add history, engineering, law, and assorted sciences.
====The general discipline====
A schema I started at Wikipedia, which could use some tweaks. Blue links obviously are here; red links may or may not come over in the same form.
Note there is overlap with Special Operations. ''things are proposals are italics; I may have working drafts''
Several of the key articles are published, starting with
:[[Intelligence cycle management]]
::[[Intelligence collection management]]
:::[[SIGINT]]+
::::[[Electro-optical MASINT]]
:::::[[Spectroscopic MASINT]]
::::[[Nuclear MASINT]]
::::[[Geophysical MASINT]] 
::::[[Radar MASINT]] ''should true imaging radar move to IMINT?''
::::[[Radiofrequency MASINT]]
::::[[Materials MASINT]]
:::[[HUMINT]]
::::[[Clandestine human-source intelligence]] strong tie-in with counterintelligence
::::[[Special reconnaissance]] also a special operations technique
:::::[[Special reconnaissance organizations]]
::::[[Clandestine human-source intelligence operational techniques]]
:::::[[Clandestine human-source intelligence recruiting]]
::::[[Clandestine human-source intelligence and covert action]] (also see [[Direct action (military)]])
:::::[[Clandestine cell system]]
:::[[Open source intelligence]]
:::[[TECHINT]]$ (the article exists, but has expanded, not necessarily cleanly, into national-level '''scientific and technical intelligence (S&TI)''' and '''economic intelligence'''. With the latter two, as with TECHINT, the problem is that they have aspects of both collection and analysis. I think they are more analysis, but haven't decided a good way to describe their collection requirements
:::::''medical intelligence'' (if it doesn't go under intelligence organizations) As for TECHINT, there are collection and analysis aspects.
:::[[IMINT]]$
::::''Should imaging radar move here, but not, for example, tracking radar used to determine missile performance? Anything from electro-optical MASINT? My basic rule: IMINT forms pictures, quasi-imaging MASINT gives graphs or property-by-pixel tables'''
::[[Intelligence analysis management]]
:::[[Intelligence analysis]]
::::[[Cognitive traps for intelligence analysis]]
::::[[US intelligence community A-Space]]
:::''financial intelligence''
:::''economic intelligence'', which I'm probably not qualified to write
:::''medical intelligence'' if it doesn't go elsewhere
::[[Intelligence dissemination management]]
::[[Intelligence cycle security]]
:::[[Counterintelligence]]
::::[[Counterintelligence failures]]*
::::[[Counter-intelligence and counterterror organizations]]* (fairly unhappy with what's around)
Articles marked with * either are split out from other lengthy articles and expanded, or of  assorted short articles of the class I call "glue", as necessary to connect other articles or provide context, such as [[Echelons above Corps]].
=====Started article at Citizendium=====
*[[Intelligence cycle management]]+
*[[Clandestine human-source intelligence and covert action]]+ (also has material pertinent to the formation of the [[Central Intelligence Agency]])
*[[Richard Sorge]]
*[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz/Sandbox2]]: Oversight and investigations material temporarily removed from [[Central Intelligence Agency]]
====US intelligence community specific====
=====Started article at Citizendium=====
*[[Central Intelligence Agency]]+
*[[CIA influence on public opinion]]+
*[[Compartmented control system]]
*[[Director of Central Intelligence]]+
*[[Director of National Intelligence]]+
*[[National Reconnaissance Office]]
*[[National technical means of verification]]
*[[United States intelligence community]]
===International agreements, political and military===
{{r|Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons}}
{{r|Biological Weapons and Toxins Convention}}
{{r|Chemical Weapons Convention}}
{{r|Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on Their Destruction}}
{{r|Missile Technology Control Regime}}
{{r|Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons}}
{{r|Wassenaar Arrangement on Export Controls for Conventional Arms and Dual-Use Goods and Technologies}}
===Politics===
*[[Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs]]
*[[General Accountability Office]]
*[[Ngo Dinh Diem]]
*[[Ho Chi Minh]]
*[[Nguyen Ngoc Tho]]
===General military===
While growing up, I rarely blew up things, preferring the more subtle threat of bacteriology. My mother, an Army reserve officer, did bring home assorted Field Manuals that would shock US Homeland Security.
In addition to military command and control, and participating in gaming and simulation, I've had a certain amount of exposure to intelligence research and analysis, and occasionally do [[open source intelligence]] consulting. Some of my graduate work was in strategic intelligence analysis.
War is hell. Still, there are moments that show the best of human virtues, such as [[Guy Gabaldon]]
The list below, of articles I've started or edited, is not up to date. There a number of short articles on individual military electronics systems, which make sense as a group. [[AN-]], to a certain extent, brings them together.
{{r|Integrated air defense system}}
{{r|Interceptor}}
{{r|MQ-1 Predator}}
{{r|Robert M. Gates}}
{{r|Suppression of enemy air defense}}
{{r|ULTRA}}
{{r|Yemen}}
====Doctrine====
{{rpl|Military doctrine}}
{{rpl|Grand strategy}}
{{rpl|Strategy (military}}
{{rpl|Total Force Concept}}
{{rpl|National technical means of verification}}
{{rpl|Operational art}}
{{rpl|Centers of gravity (military)}}
{{rpl|John Boyd}}
{{rpl|John Warden III}}
{{rpl|Corps}}
{{rpl|Joint Chiefs of Staff‎}}
{{rpl|Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff‎}}
{{rpl|National Command Authority}}
{{rpl|National Security Act of 1947}}
{{rpl|National Security Council}}
{{rpl|Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs}}
{{rpl|Swarming (military)}}+
{{rpl|United States Central Command}}
{{rpl|United States European Command}}
{{rpl|United States Joint Forces Command}}
{{rpl|United States Special Operations Command}}
{{rpl|United States Secretary of Defense}}
{{rpl|United States Secretary of State}}
{{rpl|United States Strategic Command}}
{{rpl|United States Transportation Command}}
{{rpl|George Kistiakowsky}}
====Command and Control====
{{rpl|AEGIS battle management system}}
{{rpl|Air tasking order}}
{{rpl|Army Battle Command System}}
{{rpl|Advanced Field Artillery Tactical Data System}}
{{rpl|Battle Command and Sustainment Support System}}
{{rpl|JWICS}}
{{rpl|SIPRNET}}
{{rpl|Mobile Subscriber Equipment}}
{{rpl|Global Information Grid}}
{{rpl|Common operational picture}}
{{rpl|Force multiplier}}
{{rpl|Force XXI Battle Command Brigade and Below}}
{{rpl|Forward Area Air Defense}}
{{rpl|Deconfliction}}
====Ground Combat arms====
{{rpl|Air assault}}
{{rpl|Air defense artillery}}
{{rpl|Air warfare planning}}
{{rpl|Air-to-air missile}}
{{rpl|Aircraft carrier}}
{{rpl|Amphibious ready group}}
{{rpl|Artillery}}
{{rpl|Armored vehicle}}
{{rpl|Armored fighting vehicle}}
{{rpl|Mortar}}
{{rpl|Multiple rocket launcher}}
{{rpl|Autocannon}}
{{rpl|Restructuring of the United States Army}}
{{rpl|United States Army Special Forces}}
{{rpl|Antiaircraft artillery}}
{{rpl|Armor (military unit)}}
{{rpl|Armor (materials)}}
{{rpl|Armor (personal protective)}}
{{rpl|Armor (vehicle protective)}}
{{rpl|Army Cooperation Aviation}}
{{rpl|Howitzer}}
{{rpl|High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle}}
{{rpl|Heavy Expanded Mobility Tactical Truck}}
{{rpl|Heavy Equipment Transporter System}}
{{rpl|Indirect fire}}
{{rpl|Double envelopment}}
{{rpl|Echelons above Corps}}
{{rpl|Edged weapon}}
{{rpl|M1 Abrams (tank)}}
{{rpl|M2 Bradley (armored fighting vehicle)}}
{{rpl|M113 (armored personnel carrier}}
{{rpl|M109 howitzer}}
{{rpl|Mine (land warfare)}}
{{rpl|Combat engineer}}
====Air warfare doctrine====
{{rpl|Battlefield air interdiction}}
{{rpl|Close air support}}
====Weapons of Mass Destruction====
{{rpl|Nuclear weapon}}
{{rpl|Radiological weapon}}
{{rpl|Chemical weapon}}
{{rpl|Single Integrated Operational Plan}}
{{rpl|Intercontinental ballistic missile}}
{{rpl|Submarine-launched ballistic missile}}
{{rpl|Ballistic missile defense}}
====Information operations & Military electronics====
{{rpl|AN-}}
{{rpl|Radar}}
{{rpl|Bistatic}}
{{rpl|Multistatic}}
{{rpl|APG-63}}
{{rpl|APG-65}}
{{rpl|APG-68}}
{{rpl|APG-70}}
{{rpl|APG-73}}
{{rpl|APG-79}}
{{rpl|APG-81}}
{{rpl|APY-2}}
{{rpl|APY-7}}
{{rpl|MPQ-64}}
{{rpl|SPG-62}}
{{rpl|SPS-49}}
{{rpl|SPY-1}}
{{rpl|SPY-2}}
{{rpl|TPQ-36}}
{{rpl|TPQ-37}}
{{rpl|TPQ-47}}
{{rpl|TPY-2}}
{{rpl|Counterbattery}}
{{rpl|Information operations}}
{{rpl|Joint Tactical Information Distribution System}}
{{rpl|Joint Tactical Radio System}}
{{rpl|Electronic warfare}}
{{rpl|AAQ-24}}
{{rpl|AAR-47}}
{{rpl|ALE-47}}
{{rpl|ALE-55}}
{{rpl|ALQ-162}}
{{rpl|ALQ-136}}
{{rpl|APQ-164}}
{{rpl|ALQ-165}}
{{rpl|ALQ-214}}
{{rpl|AAR-57}}
{{rpl|ALR-93}}
{{rpl|AAR-54}}
{{rpl|AVR-2}}
{{rpl|Night vision devices}}
{{rpl|Tactical air navigation}} [[TACAN]]
{{rpl|TPY-2}}
====Ordnance and Missiles====
{{rpl|Precision guided munition}}
{{rpl|Joint Direct Action Munition}}
{{rpl|AGM-154 Joint Standoff Weapon}}
{{rpl|Guided bomb}}
{{rpl|Gravity bomb}}
{{rpl|Warhead}}
{{rpl|Cluster munition}}
{{rpl|Antitank cluster submunition}}
{{rpl|Antipersonnel cluster submunition}}
{{rpl|Guided missile}}
{{rpl|Anti-cruise missile missile}}
{{rpl|Satellite orbits}}
{{rpl|Semi-active radar homing}}
{{rpl|Submarine-launched ballistic missile}}
{{rpl|AIM-7 Sparrow}}
{{rpl|AIM-9 Sidewinder}}
{{rpl|AIM-120 AMRAAM}}
{{rpl|AGM-84 Harpoon}}
{{rpl|AGM-86 ALCM}}
{{rpl|AGM-88 HARM}}
{{rpl|BaE ALARM}}
{{rpl|Intercontinental ballistic missile}}
{{rpl|MIM-104 Patriot}}
{{rpl|RIM-116 Rolling Airframe Missile}}
{{rpl|RIM-156 Standard SM-2}}
{{rpl|RIM-161 Standard SM-3}}
{{rpl|RIM-162 ESSM}}
{{rpl|RIM-174 Standard SM-6}}
{{rpl|S-75 Dvina}} [[SA-2 GUIDELINE}}
{{rpl|SA-3 GOA}}
{{rpl|S-200 (missile)}}
{{rpl|Network Centric Airborne Defense Element (missile)}}
{{rpl|Fritz-X}}
{{rpl|Novator R-172 (missile)}}
{{rpl|V-1000 (missile)}}
{{rpl|Vertical launch system}}
{{rpl|Vympel R-27 (missile)}}
{{rpl|Vympel R-33 (missile)}}
{{rpl|Vympel R-73 (missile)}}
{{rpl|Atlas (missile)}}
{{rpl|Ballistic missile defense}}
{{rpl|Surface-to-air missile}}
{{rpl|Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (missile)}}
====Second World War====
{{rpl|Battle of the Beams}}
{{rpl|Battle of Britain}}
====Aircraft====
{{rpl|LC-130}}
{{rpl|EC-130 COMMANDO SOLO}}
{{rpl|MC-130 COMBAT SPEAR}}
{{rpl|MC-130 COMBAT SHADOW}}
{{rpl|MC-130 COMBAT TALON}}
{{rpl|RC-135 RIVET JOINT}}
{{rpl|RC-135 COMBAT SENT}}
{{rpl|RC-135 COBRA BALL}}
{{rpl|C-130 Hercules}}
{{rpl|E-3 Sentry}}
{{rpl|E-8 Joint STARS}}
{{rpl|EA-6B Prowler}}
{{rpl|EF-18 Growler}}
{{rpl|F-4 Phantom II}}
{{rpl|F-15 Eagle}}
{{rpl|F-15E Strike Eagle}}
{{rpl|F-16 Fighting Falcon}}
{{rpl|F-18 Hornet}}
{{rpl|F-18 Super Hornet}}
{{rpl|F-22 Raptor}}
{{rpl|F-35 Joint Strike Fighter}}
{{rpl|F-35A Lightning II}}
{{rpl|F-35B Lightning II}}
{{rpl|F-35C Lightning II}}
{{rpl|F-105}}
{{rpl|MiG-15 (fighter)}}
{{rpl|MiG-17 (fighter)}}
{{rpl|MiG-19 (fighter)}}
{{rpl|MiG-21 (fighter)}}
{{rpl|MiG-23 (fighter)}}
{{rpl|MiG-25 (fighter)}}
{{rpl|MiG-29 (fighter)}}
{{rpl|Clandestine operation}}
====Combat support====
{{rpl|Combat support}}
{{rpl|Military police}}
====Combat service support====
{{rpl|Combat service support}}
{{rpl|Logistics (military)‎}}
====Naval warfare====
{{rpl|Battleship}}
{{rpl|Cruiser}}
{{rpl|Destroyer}}
{{rpl|Fast attack craft}}
{{rpl|Ticonderoga-class}}
{{rpl|Burke-class}}
{{rpl|Cooperative Engagement Capability}}
{{rpl|Compartmented control system}}
====Vietnam War====
{{rpl|1st Cavalry Division}}
{{rpl|I Field Force Vietnam}}
{{rpl|II Field Force Vietnam}}
{{rpl|I Corps tactical zone}}
{{rpl|II Corps tactical zone}}
{{rpl|Air Assault}}
{{rpl|Battle of Bong Son}}
{{rpl|Battle of the Ia Drang}}
{{rpl|Ngo Dinh Diem}}
{{rpl|Ho Chi Minh}}
{{rpl|Vo Nguyen Giap}}
{{rpl|Lac Luong Dac Biet}}
{{rpl|Harold Johnson}}
{{rpl|Victor Krulak}}
{{rpl|Edward Lansdale}}
{{rpl|Civilian Irregular Defense Group}}
{{rpl|Chu Huy Man}}
{{rpl|Robert McNamara}}
{{rpl|MACV-SOG}}
{{rpl|SACSA}}
{{rpl|Military Assistance Command, Vietnam}} ([[MACV]]}})
{{rpl|Operation Bolo}}+
{{rpl|Operation LINEBACKER II}}
{{rpl|Operation ROLLING THUNDER}}
{{rpl|Nguyen Ngoc Tho}}
{{rpl|William Westmoreland}}
====Gulf War====
{{rpl|Gulf War}}
*{{rpl|Gulf War, United Nations Security Council Resolutions}}
*{{rpl|Operation DESERT SHIELD}}
*{{rpl|Operation DESERT STORM}}
*{{rpl|Operation DESERT SABRE}}
*{{rpl|Gulf War, Iraqi order of battle}}
*{{rpl|Gulf War, Coalition order of battle}}
{{rpl|H Norman Schwarzkopf Jr.}}
{{rpl|Chuck Horner}}
====Iraq War====
{{rpl|David Petraeus}}
{{rpl|David Kilcullen}}
{{rpl|Anthony Zinni}}
{{rpl|Robert M. Gates}}
====Amphibious warfare====
{{rpl|Large Amphibious Landing Ship}}
{{rpl|Charles Krulak}}
{{rpl|Marine Air-Ground Task Force}}
{{rpl|Naval infantry}}
{{rpl|Amphibious ready group}}
{{rpl|Landing craft}}
{{rpl|Prepositioning ship}}
===Special operations===
=====US-independent=====
{{rpl|Insurgency}}+
{{rpl|Transnational spillover from insurgency}}
=====US-specific=====
{{rpl|Foreign internal defense}}
{{rpl|Unconventional warfare (United States doctrine)}}
{{rpl|Special reconnaissance}} (also has global information)
==Health sciences==
{{rpl|User:Howard C. Berkowitz/DiseasePage}}: Complementing PathogenPage, this is a sample of an article outline for the pathogen that causes a disease.
{{rpl|User:Howard C. Berkowitz/PathogenPage}}: Complementing DiseasePage, this is a sample of an article outline for the disease caused by a particular pathogen. There will need to be variations for bacteria, viruses, fungi, etc.
====Created article at Citizendium====
{{rpl|Acute radiation syndrome}}
{{rpl|Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act}}
{{rpl|Institutional Review Board}}
{{rpl|New drug application}}
{{rpl|Select Agent Program}}
*''[[Coccidioides posadasii}}''
*''[[Coxiella burnetii}}''
*''[[Francisella tularensis}}''
{{rpl|CDC Bioterrorism Agents-Disease list}}
{{rpl|National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine}}
*{{rpl|Oscillococcinum}}
{{rpl|Incident Command System}}
{{rpl|U.S. Department of Homeland Security}}
{{rpl|Biological weapon}}
{{rpl|Sign (medical)}}
{{rpl|Chemical weapons convention}}
{{rpl|Nuclear medicine}}
{{rpl|Emergency medicine}}
{{rpl|Neurology}}
*{{rpl|Kernig's and Brudzinski's signs}}
{{rpl|Hospice and palliative medicine}}
{{rpl|Pain Medicine}}
{{rpl|Leukocyte}}
*{{rpl|Basophil}}
*{{rpl|Neutrophil}}
*{{rpl|Macrophage}}
*{{rpl|Opsonins}}
*{{rpl|granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor}}
*{{rpl|Eosinophil}}
{{rpl|U.S. Department of Health and Human Services}}
====Contributed to Citizendium article====
{{rpl|Anaphylaxis}}
{{rpl|Discovery of penicillin}}
==Food Sciences and Agriculture==
===Cooking===
{{rpl|Red-stewing}}
===Fishing industry/marine computing and electronics===
{{rpl|Automatic identification system}}
{{rpl|Chartplotter}}
{{rpl|Digital selective calling}}
{{rpl|Emergency position indicating radio beacon}}
{{rpl|Fisheries monitoring surveillance and control}}
{{rpl|Global Maritime Distress and Safety System}}
{{rpl|International Maritime Organization}}
{{rpl|Radar}}
{{rpl|Search and rescue}}
{{rpl|Search and rescue transponder}}
{{rpl|Safety of Life at Sea}}
{{rpl|Vessel monitoring system}}


Financial disclosure: I haven't received any royalties in years from my books, and I no longer write for any profit-making certification training organization.
==References==
==References==
{{reflist|2}}
{{reflist|2}}

Latest revision as of 14:36, 25 June 2024


The account of this former contributor was not re-activated after the server upgrade of March 2022.


Howard C. Berkowitz is no longer a member of this project

With some of my staff...Sweet in tuxedo and Rhonda in furs

Over my protests regarding due process and Charter violations, I have been stripped of my Politics and History Editorships, simultaneously with statements that my large number of criticism in these areas are not being criticized. At the best, I believe the Editorial Council is overly concerned with credentialism rather than actual knowledge. I also seriously question the EC's essentially stopping all other business and content work other than focusing on my Editorships, based on an anonymous complaint, and not having experts in any of these disciplines making determinations of expertise.

Hourglass drawing.svg Where Howard lives it is approximately: 21:31

CZ Governance and Editor Qualifications

With the passage of an Editorial Council resolution on making public one's qualifications to be an Editor, I will attempt to do so here, as well as the required Editor Subpage I only ask, especially while I am getting feedback on the way I present it, that people trying to understand my background read the full user page, and also understand that much of my relevant experience is interdisciplinary and sometimes nontraditional.

I don't think anyone can be a CZ Editor without a thorough understanding of both the subject and the CZ environment. In my opinion, one of the fundamental ways to determine both is to look at the content contributions of the individual as an author, even before Editor status is granted. In a substantial part of at least American (U.S. and Canada), many institutions recognize nontraditional learning through the presentation of a "portfolio" in the subject, and perhaps interviews with subject specialists. I'm not especially a traditional learner, but I'm certainly willing to demonstrate competence. Bear with me as I work on the best way to present my best work, especially since much is interdisciplinary. I'm certainly not suggesting I wrote every article in the workgroup/subgroup, although I do believe I have several +++ entries below represent a hierarchy of articles; the top is listed.

Useful Forum links

Who am I?

I was born shortly after what I prefer to call Big Mistake Two, as a means of avoiding the WWII, Second World War, World War Two, Great Patriotic War, etc., arguments. :-< Specifically, I was born in Newark, New Jersey. For those that do not know the New Jersey suburbs of the greater New York areas, at the time, many of the stories of them being a massive chemical waste dump have at least some truth. In respect to the philosophers at CZ, it is fair to say that Nietzsche may have had Newark in mind with "what does not destroy me makes me the stronger."

Mr. Clark (1997-2010), much missed best friend, senior editorial adviser, expert in nursing, food, pets, Buddhism, food, pet therapy, food and raising 2- and 4-legged kittens

Right there, you see my endorsement of a saying in the Royal Navy: "if you can't take a joke, you shouldn't have joined." At this point, it seems appropriate to give credit to my editorial advisers, Rhonda and the late, dearly missed Mr. Clark, my best friend.

Professionally, I do network engineering, information secuity, and medical information systems, but am increasingly involved in electronics for commercial fishing (http://www.beachwerks.com), which, in turn, is leading to proposing some renewable biodiesel work, although I'm likely to be returning to building very big networks. When Aleta referred to one of those topics as "not rocket science", I felt compelled to write that article, although I'm stuck in not knowing how to format some equations. Some of my current consulting work deals with the security aspects of cloud computing and the Federal Information Security Management Act of 2002 (FISMA).

Rhonda, editorial adviser and expert in marketing, fashion, dog training, social networking and party planning, and possibly world domination in a benevolent way

After many years in the Washington DC area, I am now in a fishing village on Cape Cod. As Monty Python would have it, it is far more productive to look at fishing there than in the middle of the Sahara. I am a member of the Barnstable County Medical Reserve Corps, and have been trying to get support for a biodiesel proposal: an elegant little concept of having seafood caught by diesel-powered fishing vessels, fried by local restaurants, whose waste vegetable oil comes back to our facility, and is converted into mixed biodiesel to go back into the boats.

In the networking realm, I've long been a participant in communications standards, passing knowledge forward in writing and teaching, developing routing and network management products, and architecting a good number of large service provider and enterprise networks. Published four books, author/coauthor of several Internet Engineering Task Force RFCs and many more drafts, dozens of industry presentations, including tutorials on routing for the North American Network Operators Group (http://nanog.org/authors.html). Worked for several years at Nortel, starting as Product Line Manager for Carrier Routing Protocols, and then moving into the corporate research lab as Senior Advisor on IP Routing. Was an invited speaker for the Internet Society meeting in Stockholm, discussing the limits of the Internet routing system.

Until the mania for easy-to-test industry certifications took away the enjoyable parts of teaching other than the test, was a certified instructor for Cisco, primarily teaching Internetwork Design. My specialties include fault tolerance, routing and router design, and network management, plus applications in fields including telecommunications/Internet service provision, military systems, and medicine.

Perhaps not surprisingly, network-centric computing has kept me intertwined with military and intelligence matters (see C3I-ISR for some attempt to keep the alphabet soup under control). Especially in my earlier career, this meshed with my background in microbial biochemistry, so I continue (also wearing the emergency management hat) with WMD, but also technology and social science support to special operations. For example, during Vietnam, I worked for several contractors, academic and commercial, dealing with tactical sensors, assessment of counterinsurgency, etc., and had a good deal of training in intelligence analysis. Later on, I was a technical contributor to national-level C3I network architecture. I've also had the benefit of some mentoring by colleagues through flag officer level in C3I.

At Citizendium, my areas of contribution are principally in military and intelligence areas, which combine Military, History, Politics, Engineering and Computers. With great pleasure, I am again writing in one of my main professional areas, computer network engineering, which simply had become too painful at Wikipedia. I also contribute to health sciences, particularly in regard to clinical computing and medical information management. Occasionally, I will join miscellaneous topics of interest such as cooking, maritime computing and electronics (part of my current business), commercial fishing, and journalism.

Military, intelligence, history and politics

'"These pertain to my qualifications as a Military, History and Politics Editor. In direct support of that, I also mention the large number of articles that I have contributed to CZ, and are readily available for review. I will continue to protest the revocation of the History editorship.

While growing up, I rarely blew up things, preferring the more subtle threat of bacteriology. My mother, an Army reserve officer, did bring home assorted Field Manuals that would shock US Homeland Security.

As a network engineer, I have had substantial exposure to military command, control, communications and intelligence. Some of my consulting is in open source intelligence dealing with counterinsurgency and terrorism.

In addition to military command and control, and participating in gaming and simulation (venues including the Industrial College of the Armed Forces), I've had a certain amount of exposure to intelligence research and analysis, and occasionally do open source intelligence consulting. Some of my graduate work was in strategic intelligence analysis at the School of International Service, American University.

War is hell. Still, there are moments that show the best of human virtues, such as Guy Gabaldon and Ben Salomon. I've written in excess of 2000 military-related articles here, many of which blur into politics, international relations style.

Military planning, intelligence analysis, social science and history

Interdisciplinary alert: Military, History, Politics. These are extremely intertwined issues for the practitioner.

The practice of politics

While the Workgroup system may not always be with us, I observe it is the Politics Workgroup rather than the Political Science Workgroup. I've had substantial experience in political campaigning, internals of poltical process, lobbying and preparing testimony. While some of my work was with what was then the Republican Party (United States), I can only claim that the party ethos was considerably different than it is today, when "moderate Republican" is the moral equivalent of "slightly pregnant." If I may use 12-step terms, I am a Recovering Republican, who still graduated from the Republican Senior Campaign Management School and was on campaign staffs, including the DC Nixon Campaign in 1972. I spent several years as Research Director for the District of Columbia (state-equivalent) Republican Committee and DC Young Republicans. For the Ripon Society, a moderate Republican policy group, I contributed to Congressional testimony on government secrecy and on Congressional representation for the District of Columbia. Representing Young Americans for Freedom, I debated Tom Charles Huston on the constitutionality and practicality of the "Huston Plan" for domestic surveillance and political provocation during the second Nixon Administration.

With the capture of the Republican Party by social conservatives, I was no longer actively affiliated, but continued to be involved in local politics, often nonpartisan, in Arlington County, Virginia. I am involved in a variety of serious discussion forums and mailing lists, often shared with elected and appointed officials.

History

As George Santayana put it, "those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it." When the first recognizable military staff function was created, circa 1657, in Prussia, the very first role defined was the staff historian. [1] History, and more recently social science, have been an integral part since to the military planning process and the separate development of national intelligence.

Intelligence analysis routinely draws on historical and social science analysis. Perhaps the greatest difference between intelligence analysis and academic history is that the analyst may be under unbreakable deadlines to provide information to policymakers, and the report ("estimate") delivered has to contain uncertainties. A good report makes the uncertainties clear, although sadly, it is not the case that the policymakers will read, understand, and use them. A bad report will allow itself to be tailored to what the policymaker wants to hear (e.g., Office of Special Plans).

Precisely due to time and other pressures, analysts are, as much as academic specialists, aware of the need for quality, and watch for cognitive traps for intelligence analysis.

An example of one of my open source intelligence (OSINT) assignments that blended historical and military affairs was at the Center for Research in Social Systems (formerly the Special Operations Research Office), a Federal Contract Research Center run by American University in Washington, DC. This is long enough ago that client and national security confidentiality no longer apply. The primary client was the United States Army, especially United States Army Special Forces. I analyzed consecutive translations of the North Vietnamese party news journal, Nhan Dan, and its theoretical journal, Hoc Tap. My task was to identify possible changes in policy both at the national level during the Vietnam War, but also of individual policymakers. Often, the policy change was not explicitly stated, but would be based on citing approval or disapproval of the acts of individuals in Vietnamese history. Policymakers on both sides of a decision might couch their arguments in terms of agreement or disagreement with a famous past monarch such as Nguyen Hue, just as we knew that the "Nguyen Hue Offensive" in captured documents was something serious -- it became the Tet Offensive.

It's much more difficult to talk about recent assignments in OSINT. The best I can say about one, for example, is that I studied the history and economics of infrastructure development in a country that has been been supportive of terrorists, in order to predict where they might locate bases and where they might have their own critical infrastructure. Hyoothetically, the existence of informal value transfer systems gives one a key to where to collect financial intelligence.

Health Sciences and Emergency Medicine

In medicine, to paraphrase from an old US television commercial, I'm not a physician but simulate them on computers. While I was a user of Index Medicus before MEDLINE on computers, my first professional work on medical computing was manager and chief developer of clinical computing to the Georgetown University Hospital, an outsourced company, Washington Reference Laboratories, owned by the head of clinical chemistry, Dr. Martin Rubin. I continue consulting work on the products of http://www.aionex.com and have two patents in progress. While it's hard to put into formal terms, I'm passionate about pharmacology -- what other sort of person nags his mother for a Merck Index of Chemicals and Drugs for his 10th birthday?

Phamacology and public health

Before I discovered I wasn't cut out to be a bench biochemist, my undergraduate research was on "Competitive inhibition of penicillinase by notalysin, a Penicillium notatum (Westling strain, ATCC 10108) metabolite"; it might have been an early variant of something like clavulanic acid. I started that research proposal while in high school; I had the luck to start getting mentoring from a physician/biochemist and an academic microbiologist, and it probably was just as well that my mother did not know all of what was in my basement lab. No, no explosives, just pathogens -- I later did make some improvised things that went *bang*, but that was under guidance while a contractor working with U.S. Army Special Forces.

Still, I keep up with relevant literature in infectious diseases and antibiotics. My budget, one of these days, will have room again for the American Public Health Association.

Medical informatics and decision systems

Interdisciplinary alert: computers and health sciences

The Georgetown work started in 1970, and has continued. Among my more recent work is contributing to the architecture of the nursing workflow management system produced by Aionex. I am working with several primary physicians to improve their office charting and electronic medical records, as well as electronic prescribing.

Emergency management and medicine

Somewhat bridging Engineering, Computers and medicine, I've been involved, in a number of ways, in emergency management, ranging from medical disaster plan development and support, to work with the Incident Command System, and having a number of distance learning certificates from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.


We've really not defined a workgroup for emergency management, so I've been using Engineering; and created CZ: Emergency management Subgroup. Firefighting, aviation and aviation safety, marine navigation and safety, rescue, etc. into the Engineering Workgroup.

I am a member of the Cape Cod Medical Reserve Corps.

General engineering

It's often an interesting question on what goes into the Engineering Workgroup. So far, I've tended to put things regarding generic equipment packaging, incident command system emergency management, etc., into it. There are enough similarity among engineering disciplines, at least where I have been an approving Editor, that makes it possible to look for good engineering-oriented explanation even if I'm not an expert in the subdiscipline.

Network engineering

My experience with communications standards goes back to the mid-seventies, variously with ISO/CCITT and ANSI to start, especially in network performance. I worked for GTE for a time, and had a good deal of exposure to the internals of telephone networks. As a member of the Federal Telecommunications Standards Committee (1976-1980), I got in at the beginning of what was to become OSI, and also got interested in survivable communications systems, including the (US) National Communications Systems and military networks intended to operate under the most extreme conditions. Those extremes tended to be that the network really needed to operate for 20 minutes or so, but you never knew when the 20 minutes would start, and would just have to cope with network elements randomly turning into mushroom clouds. This tied in with a lifelong interest in politicomilitary history.

Open Systems Interconnection

The FTSC and National Communications System contributed, in the late seventies, to the ANSI Distributed Systems (DISY) architecture, which was a significant input into the OSI architecture. ISO 7498, the basic OSI Reference Model (OSIRM), was published in 1984. Even ignoring the eventual dominance of Internet protocols, there is a great deal of misunderstanding about OSI, because educators generally ignored supplemental ISO documents that clarified ISO 7498.

From 1986 to 1991, I was the first technical staff member at the Corporation for Open Systems, a not-for-profit industry research center for promoting and testing OSI and ISDN protocols. In addition to secretariat work with the various committees, I managed teams working on FTAM and X.25 test systems, and contributed to IEEE 802 test systems. One memorable experience was lecturing about X.25 testing in Japan, and had the horrible realization that my PowerPoint slides, translated into Japanese, had gotten into a different order than my English-language notes.

For around six years of my life, I explained how OSI was the answer, but eventually realized I didn't know the question.

The moving hand writes on the wall: "it's about IP, stupid"

By the early nineties, it was obvious that Internet protocols were indeed the answer, and I started to play in the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), North American Network Operators Group (NANOG)and the Internet Research Task Force (IRTF).

In the IETF, my main work has been in the Routing (especially BGP/IDR and OSPF) and Operations & Management Areas (especially BMWG & OPSEC), and, more as a lurker, Security and Real-time Applications & Infrastructure Area. I am an author or coauthor of RFC 1912, RFC 2071[2], RFC 2072[3], RFC 4098[4], and was a reviewer or contributor with many others. I've done quite a few tutorials and presentations available at www.nanog.org, and was a participant in "Team B" of the IRTF Future Domain Requirements effort[5], which essentially looked at the question "what comes after BGP?" Some of my most satisfying work came when I was first the product line manager for routing protocols in the carrier router group, and then in corporate research at Nortel, both working with standards and operational forums, and designing a next-generation router.

Why network architectures and standards?

The early days of computer networks were dominated by a few large companies such as IBM and DEC. In order promote interoperability and avoid a situation where a small number of vendors predominated, each with their own proprietary technology, it was necessary to introduce a set of open standards defining network protocols.

Another issue addressed by this model is maintaining the level of flexibility needed to adapt when new innovations are introduced. The earliest wide area networks (or WANs) ran over telephone lines and were used to link a small number of facilities.

Today, we rarely think about why Internet access has become so ubiquitous. Still, this is quite a technical achievement: a user may be connected to an Ethernet network, Fiber Distributed Data Interface (FDDI) or a wireless network in a coffee house. They may also use such diverse methods as DSL, cable, or dialup lines to "get online."

The Truth about Network Reference Models

There is a continuing and frustrating tendency, in Wikipedia articles on network architecture, to treat the Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model as if it is still used other than as a teaching aid, and to try to “coerce” (using the lovely word choice of my colleague, Priscilla Oppenheimer) Internet Protocol Suite protocols into OSI layers. Layering, as an abstraction, is useful up to a point. It can be overused. An updated IETF architectural document, RFC3439, [6] even contains a section entitled: "Layering Considered Harmful": Emphasizing layering as the key driver of architecture is not a feature of the TCP/IP model, but rather of OSI. Much confusion comes from attempts to force OSI-like layering onto an architecture that minimizes their use.

I have insufficient hair to tear it out whenever I try to explain that the Internet protocol suite was not intended to match OSI, was developed before OSI, the full set of OSI specifications (i.e., not just document ISO 7498) subdivide layers so that it is no longer seven, and that OSI has, in the real world, been relegated to a teaching tool. The Internet Protocol Suite has four layers, defined in RFC1122[7]and no IETF document, as opposed to some nonauthoritative textbooks, say it has five.

No IETF standards-track document has accepted a five-layer model, and IETF documents indeed deprecate strict layering of all sorts. Given the lack of acceptance of the five-layer model by the body with technical responsibility for the protocol suite, it is not unreasonable to regard five-layer presentations as teaching aids, possibly to make the IP suite architecture more familiar to those students who were first exposed to layering using the Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model. Comparisons between the IP and OSI suites can give some insight into the abstraction of layering, but trying to coerce Internet protocols, not designed with OSI in mind, can only lead to confusion.

Again, RFC1122 defines 4 layers. If anyone can find another IETF document that states the Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model is followed, please cite it. Further, RFC 1122 was published in 1989, while the OSI Reference Model, ISO 7498, was published in 1984. If the RFC 1122 authors had wanted to be OSI compliant, they had the OSI definitions available to them. They didn't use them. Does that suggest they were not concerned with OSI compliance?

For Internet Protocol Suite architecture, textbooks are not authoritative; the IETF's work, particularly the Standards Track, is definitive for the Internet Protocol Suite. I've written networking textbooks, and, while I might clarify an IETF document, I certainly don't contend that textbooks are more definitive than the actual technical specifications created by expert, not beginning student or teacher, consensus.

Unfortunately not available free online AFAIK, there are ISO documents such as "Internal Organization of the Network Layer" [8], which splits the network layer nicely into three levels, logical (lower-layer agnostic), subnetwork (i.e., link technology) specific, and a mapping sublayer between them. ARP, with which many people struggle, drops perfectly into the mapping (technically subnetwork dependence convergence) between them. Another ISO document, "OSI Routeing [sic] Framework" [9], makes it clear that routing protocols, no matter what protocol carries their payloads, are layer management protocols for the network layer. Annex 4 to ISO 7498 gives the OSI Management Framework [10], with both system management and layer management components.

When the IETF was dealing with MPLS and some other things that "don't quite fit", and some people insisted on calling it "layer 2.5", the reality is that the IETF set up a "Sub-IP Area" and did the original work there. MPLS is now back under the Routing Area. There was also a Performance Implications of Link Characteristics (PILC) working group that has ended its effort, but also deals with sub-IP (archives at http://www.isi.edu/pilc/).

Why is Wikipedia having problems in network topics?

There is a great deal of valuable information on networking at Wikipedia. There is also a great deal of misinformation, partially due to networking experts leaving in frustration with the process of having authoritative definitions constantly changed by editors who found their high school or college textbook conflicted with primary sources or direct experience in developing networks and primary sources.

I'm one of those people. while I'll certainly stay involved in my profession, I've found the frustration of working with Wikipedia on serious network architecture is simply no fun at all. One of the most important real-world issues is that in terms of real-world products and networks, the "7-layer" Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model‎ from the International Organization for Standardization is dead, and the less formal architectural models primarily associated with the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) and the Institute for Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) actually define what is done. Unfortunately, most introductory courses and books on networking keep the Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model as a key part of their presentations, much as, I suppose, Dr. Frankenstein kept his undead monster alive.

If people want to keep insisting that IETF protocols must fit into the OSI reference model, if protocol payloads must be of layer N+1 if their payload is management (e.g., routing) for layer N, that there are five layers in the Internet reference model, may they enjoy themselves. It's not even that I've tried to impose an IP-centric view, although I have linked RFCs specifically saying that strict layering is considered harmful and RFC 1122 chose to ignore ISO 7498; I've even cited more detailed ISO documents -- but people want to keep insisting their incorrect textbooks are more authoritative, or "explain" to me about protocol encapsulation and layering.

In the real world, I've written four books on network engineering, Designing Addressing Architectures for Routing and Switching[11], Designing Routing and Switching Architectures for Enterprise Networks[12], WAN Survival Guide[13], and Building Service Provider Networks[14]. My general sense is that vendor-independent traditional engineering books have a limited market, and I've been concentrating more on online publications. In the past, I've been involved in preparation for Cisco certifications, and still participate in mailing lists.

Financial disclosure: I haven't received any royalties in years from my books, and I no longer write for any profit-making certification training organization.

References

  1. Walter Goerlitz, History of the German General Staff, 1657-1945
  2. Ferguson, P & H Berkowitz (1997), Network Renumbering Overview: Why would I want it and what is it anyway?, IETF, RFC2071
  3. Berkowitz, H (1997), Router Renumbering Guide, IETF, FDR
  4. Berkowitz, H; E Davies & S Hares et al. (2005), Terminology for Benchmarking BGP Device Convergence in the Control Plane, IETF, RFC4098
  5. Davies E. & Doria A., ed. (2007), Analysis of IDR requirements and History, IETF
  6. Bush, R. & Meyer (2002), Some Internet Architectural Guidelines and Philosophy, IETF, RFC3439
  7. Braden, R (1989), Requirements for Internet Hosts -- Communication Layers, IETF, RFC1122
  8. Internal Organization of the Network Layer, ISO, 1988, ISO 8648
  9. OSI Routeing Framework, ISO, 1995, ISO/TR 9575
  10. Open Systems Interconnection -- Basic Reference Model -- Part 4: Management framework, ISO, ISO7498/4
  11. Berkowitz, Howard C. (1998). Designing Addressing Architectures for Routing and Switching. Indianapolis: Macmillan Technical Publishing. ISBN 1578700590. 
  12. Berkowitz, Howard C. (1999). Designing Routing and Switching Architectures for Enterprise Networks. Indianapolis: Macmillan Technical Publishing. ISBN 1578700604. 
  13. Berkowitz, Howard C. (2000). WAN Survival Guide: Strategies for VPNs and Multiservice Networks. New York: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0471384283. 
  14. Berkowitz, Howard C. (2002). Building Service Provider Networks. New York: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0471099228.