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- Submitted-by: rogers@ofc.uucp
-
- In article <558@usenix.ORG> std-unix@uunet.uu.net writes:
- >
- >In my opinion, NIST is going to go ahead and publish a flawed FIPS in
- >the belief that it will drive the IEEE to pick up the pace of POSIX.
- >The Government has a burning need for a standard, they find it
- >politically unacceptable to use UNIX System V as that standard, and
- >they strongly prefer action over waiting for the IEEE.
- >
- There is something to be said for any action which motivates the IEEE
- committees to move a little faster. This type of action, however, will
- ultimately cost the taxpayer when agencies who purchase D9 implementations
- have to retool a year later because all the developed applications will
- honor the final dot 2 draft.
-
- What I fail to understand is IEEE's continuing propensity to violate the
- "prime directive", i.e., their failure to specify common practice. As
- long as they continue this annoying habit, they will continue creating
- these problems. It is far better to specify common practice, then work
- through some other forum on getting the vendors to change the functionality
- for future versions.
-
- Attempting to legislate change through IEEE dot n committees may even
- work, but guess what? Instead of Uncle Sam buying something off the
- shelf for near commodity prices, he has to buy a "special" for inflated
- prices because it had to be especially developed. Nobody had it, not
- common practice,... And guess what else? You, I, Roger Martin, and
- the rest of us collectively make up "Uncle Sam." It's your money, ace.
-
- IMHO, IEEE "management" needs to put their foot down and put an end to
- the real political battles - those being fought in IEEE dot n
- committees. Then NIST would be an ally instead of an opponent.
- ---
- HL Rogers (hl.rogers@ncrcae.Columbia.NCR.COM)
-
- Volume-Number: Volume 21, Number 160
-
-