"The vision we're looking at is, every soldier is issued a phone," says  Michael McCarthy, director of operations at the Brigade Modernization  Command, Mission Command Complex, at Fort Bliss, Texas. Here the testing of commercial smartphones and tablets has been going on for several months, sometimes with  soldiers toting them along for general administrative duties and  training, or even taking them out in field exercises in the rugged  desert surroundings. Along with McCarthy, Ed Mazzanti and Col. Marissa  Tanner are leading the project the Army calls "Connecting Soldiers to  Digital Apps."
 
 But lots of questions need to be answered before the Army can give the go-ahead to give each  U.S. solider a smartphone. McCarthy says Army analysts are seeking to  find out whether smartphones, as well as tablets, could be adapted to  meet specific security and operational considerations the military has.
 
 The Army wants to know if assigned military radio frequencies can be  securely used with the new generation of hand-held devices in order to  support a more custom-designed network that could be set up on the go.
 
 The Army is exploring that possibility by reviewing three new wireless technologies -- one called Monax from Lockheed Martin, another from Oceus Networks (partnering with Northrop Grumman), and third, the "cognitive radio" gear from xG Technology.
 
 McCarthy says Army technical analysts supervising the tests have been  encouraged by what they've seen with xG's "cognitive radio" gear which  enables "frequency hopping" by continually searching for unused  frequency spectrum, a technique that McCarthy says appears to reduce  interference problems. The xG equipment provides voice and data,  supporting approximately 4MB for each smartphone user, though it is  dependent on the number of users and the distance from a base station.
 
 "Our target going forward is to hit 35 kilometers from the base  station," says McCarthy about the Army's ideas for how it might set up a  network of portable base stations on the go. The Army would like to be  able to transport wireless radio base station equipment of some type to  wherever it's needed, quickly setting up and tearing down a network for  smartphones for assigned military frequencies.
 
 The Amy appears to be the first among the U.S. military services to take  this much interest in using smartphones, though the Air Force and Navy  are motivated as well, says McCarthy. He adds U.S. allies, such as NATO  partners, also have "significant interest."
 
 But can commercial smartphones really meet the Army's security and operational requirements?
 
 The Army is working to find out, checking out about 1,200 phones and other devices (including about 15 basic models of Apple iPhones and iPads, Google Android, and Microsoft Windows Mobile). "The folks at HP are coming out with a Web OS and they will send me some devices to test," says McCarthy.
 
 But the Army says it doesn't want to be picking a single winner. One way  envisioned to achieve smartphone heterogeneity involves using a  software HTML-based framework that Army developers came up with that  allows for writing smartphone applications once so they run on multiple smartphone operating systems. It's hoped  this would eliminate the need to write apps multiple times for various  smartphone operating systems, says McCarthy.
 
 "We're trying to stay device and OS agnostic," he says, adding that the  Army's aspiration is to "buy the right phones for the right people for  the right reason."
 
 The Army anticipates turning to both the commercial sector and its own  Army developers for the apps the military may need. Developers at Fort  Lee some time ago came up a couple hundred logistical apps for both  Google Android and the Apple iPhone,  while army specialists at Fort Bliss have written about two dozen  tactical applications, including variants on a medical-evacuation  request.
 
 Tests have shown that the speed of filling out medical evacuation forms  can be reduced from 15 minutes to 1.5 minutes using smartphone  capabilities, says McCarthy.
 
 If smartphones do end up being used in military operations by soldiers,  these devices could end up being "as important to them as their weapon,"  McCarthy suggests. At the same time, there's also the notion that if  smartphones were lost or damaged, there would be a way to treat them as  scrapped and move on to a new one. And because smartphones use touch  screens, the Army might need to find different gloves for soldiers than  the ones generally used today.
 
 Smartphone apps are already showing their value in pilot projects  involving training of soldiers that includes making material available  via smartphones that soldiers carry around on base. This is boosting  their grade-point averages when taking Army exams, apparently because  the smartphones help spur a little competition among soldiers, almost  like a video game, says McCarthy. "Before, we had power-point handouts,"  he adds, which wasn't always regarded as a compelling training format.
 
 But are smartphones and tablets tough enough in terms of security and ruggedness to join the Army?
 
 That's still a big question. The National Security Agency (NSA),  America's high-tech spy agency which also plays a role in Department of  Defense security, is working to come up with viable security options, such as chipsets for encryption that could be certified for use in smartphones.
 
 The military is also looking at how biometrics, including voice, face or  iris scans, could be used with smartphones to validate identity; one  option under consideration is a 3G biometric Intel platform. "We want to  find out what technology works best and what technology soldiers prefer  to use," McCarthy says.
 
 The Army has no set deadline for making a decision on smartphones, and  recognizes the high-tech industry, now flooding the world with its  endless variety of hand-held devices, could come up with radical  improvements in a short time span. If there's anything that does give  the military pause, it's that most smartphones and tablets are  manufactured outside the U.S., including in nations that are not even  officially American allies. "It's a concern," says McCarthy, adding that  the military is sharing those concerns with the smartphone and tablet  manufacturers involved.
