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- From: gwyn@smoke.BRL.MIL (Doug Gwyn )
-
- In article <270@longway.TIC.COM> Shane P. McCarron <ahby@bungia.bungia.mn.org> writes:
- >In defense of the NIST, I know that they are not trying to
- >destroy the standards making process. In reality they are
- >just a bunch of people trying to do their jobs the best way
- >they know how. It is unfortunate that in doing so they may
- >end up doing more harm than good.
-
- I fully agree with your criticism of the way NIST has taken it upon
- themselves to publish FIPS before the related standards in progress
- are even semi-stable. As a member of an agency that has to justify
- not specifying compliance with applicable FIPS, I must say that far
- from helping me procure standard-environment systems, NIST is making
- it difficult to procure ANY system, let alone one that sufficiently
- meets our needs. FIPS-151 is a minor disaster that fortunately can
- probably be straightened out before it is too late, but additional
- FIPS for other 1003.* areas are definitely premature and interfere
- with production of quality standardized environmental specifications.
-
- If NIST had Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie, Brian Kernighan, and Rob
- Pike (for example) writing their FIPS, then it wouldn't distress me
- so much, because at least the FIPS would be reasonable specifications.
- But they are FAR from being in a position to develop clean, usable
- operating system environment specifications on their own. Why are
- they trying to do so? It's completely subverting the standardization
- process!
-
- [ FIPS-151 is the one published in August 1988 about IEEE 1003.1. -mod ]
-
- Volume-Number: Volume 15, Number 39
-
-