Abstract
The concept of Advanced Distributed Simulation (ADS) has evolved over the past fifteen years from the early days of SIMNET, through the Distributed Interactive Simulation (DIS) standards, the development of the Aggregate Level Simulation Protocol (ALSP), and most recently the High Level Architecture (HLA). This evolution includes the historical events, the technical architectures, and the standards to support interoperability. The historical evolution shows the architecture development paths that led to HLA today. Architectural evolution has utilized lessons learned to evolve to a more flexible architecture supporting more application domains and simulation types than ever before. Standards evolution shows a community willing to evolve its processes to meet the changing needs of the ADS community. The objective of this paper is to provide the modeling and simulation community with information on these three aspects of the ADS evolution and what it means in the years to come. 1980's demonstrated the capability to utilize
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