Interesting People mailing list archives

IP: more on CRADA -- you can hear the rip (off)


From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Wed, 26 Dec 2001 14:17:53 -0500


X-Sender: simon () higgs com
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Date: Wed, 26 Dec 2001 10:57:47 -0800
To: farber () cis upenn edu
From: Simon Higgs <simon () higgs com>


The MILSPEC database is still being bought by the government every year from private "publishers". Not just once, but for each "seat" viewing the information. DLA have set up a web site to reduce this cost, but it is very slow, MS IIS based (so it disappears every time there's a worm or online security flap), and is often not reliable enough for just-in-time production work:

http://www.dscc.dla.mil/Programs/MilSpec/

This sends the people who need a full set of specs scurrying back to the private publishers for proprietary format CD-ROMs, or per-seat "accounts" to log into the publisher's web site and download the standards one at a time.

Then there's the problem of Milspecs or standards which have been adopted from commercial standards and are owned by other organizations such as ANSI, IEEE, ITU, etc... each private spec or standard gets paid for over and over again for each person needing to view it.

On the production line, the aerospace industry writes all this off as a cost of doing business and passes these costs on to the government within the assigned contract, so burden ends up with the taxpayer who ends up paying for the same specs and standards multiple times for each step of the design/production/QA process.

On a lighter note, for details of how the military came up with their sheep specs, see the HBO movie "Pentagon Wars".

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