Slashdot Mirror


Pentagon to Significantly Cut CS Research

GabrielF writes "Over the last few decades, DARPA, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has funded some of the most successful computer science research projects in history, such as the Internet. However, according to the New York Times, DARPA has recently decided to significantly cut funding of open-ended computer science research projects in favor of projects that will yield short-term military results. Leading computer scientists, such as David Patterson, the head of the ACM are outraged and worried."

408 comments

  1. Technology by mikeleemm · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Since the whole .COM bust, technology has been slow moving. Doesn't come as a surprise funding will be cut on such either. Pretty sad unfortunately, but just look at the slowdown in any research, new products and innovation.

    1. Re:Technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It seems to go in a cycle, innovation followed by consolidation. Someone will make a breakthrough somewhere and we'll see the process start over again.

    2. Re:Technology by mikeleemm · · Score: 1

      Hope so, but where are we heading as far as computer technologies anyways? The "latest" crap is things like VOIP, RFID and wireless. All of which are not too special, all hype, and implemented kind of poorly. Obviously, as far as things such as processor technology/speed/etc, the increase has been fairly slow in the past few years, and not too much advancement in software or applications of such. Other than government, who's obviously out to fund things that immediately and directly benefit them at this point, companies are doing the same exact thing, generally funding things that make money only.

    3. Re:Technology by dnoyeb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Don't think so. This was there before the bust, so why is there any relation to the bust.

      Not saying there is anything special about this president but next time try to pick one who has friends in industries you want to see funded because thats how this game works.

    4. Re:Technology by CaymanIslandCarpedie · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Exactly!!! With Bush, you get federal funding to help research drilling for oil in a nature preserve (Anwar) and cut funding for science/technology.

      --
      "reality has a well-known liberal bias" - Steven Colbert
    5. Re:Technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cold War ended...

      no point in proliferating real WMDs, or cool technology.

    6. Re:Technology by notque · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not saying there is anything special about this president but next time try to pick one who has friends in industries you want to see funded because thats how this game works.

      I'd rather my president have a combatitive relationship with industry than a friendly relationship.

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    7. Re:Technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Um, it's not a budget cut. It's a shift.
      Companies (defense contractors) are getting the
      research monies that schools used to get.

      Your theory about an echo-of-the-dot-com bust
      is wrong.

    8. Re:Technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd rather my president have a combatitive relationship with industry than a friendly relationship.

      This is slashdot. I believe you mean then a friendly relationship. :o)

    9. Re:Technology by discstickers · · Score: 1

      Yea, I'm sure Bush had major role in this decision.

      --
      I have a shitty sig!
    10. Re:Technology by freedom_india · · Score: 2, Interesting

      DARPA is a military agency. Them concentrating only on short-term military gains projects doesn't surprise me. However on the same count, NASA should NOT launch spy satellites. It is a civilian agency.

      --
      "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
    11. Re:Technology by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The role of government in costly downcycles is to reinvest in stabilizing the cycle. Especially when the cycle has been so integrated with government spending, and when it returns so well on investment. 50% of American economic growth is technology. And American defense depends on retaining our tech edge - so tech investment is an essential role for the DoD. They might have made a more persuasive argument for weaning the tech R&D community from DoD money when it was booming. But cutting it when the DoD budget is booming, and American tech is busting, is to kick this essential industry when it's down.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    12. Re:Technology by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Can you tell us any decision in which Bush has a major role, except spokesmodel? Or how it's acceptable that the President has no role in such a primary policy change at such a huge (20% of government) department with he's "responsible" for?

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    13. Re:Technology by mzieg · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I'm not a VOIP fanatic myself (though I've business friends who are), but wireless and RFID are certainly interesting. I think most people see the fascinating implications for wireless by themselves, so let me try to preach RFID for a moment.

      Computer technology spans many "core" disciplines: processing (figuring things out), communication (hooking people and things together), visualization (graphics & simulations), etc. But one of the most significant has always been information: instant automated access to the who, what, and when of the world. ("Why," for the nonce, remains left to we mere mortals :-)

      But while computers provide wonderful database access to that information, we still need someone to type most of it in. You can't OCR an invoice until it's been keyed; eye-safety and unobstructed line-of-sight requirements sharply bound barcode scalability; and ATR (automatic target recognition) "isn't there yet" in a big way.

      If you want real-time access to real-world data about real-world objects, then you need some kind of inexpensive wireless automated tracking/ID mechanism which can be remotely queried through simple obstacles (cloth, paper, etc). RFID provides that.

      Combined with wireless networking, RFID opens up a Pandora's Box of interesting new possibilities -- some wonderful, some frightening, especially from the privacy standpoint. But just because the "killer apps" haven't yet been identified and married to effective markets doesn't mean they aren't there.

      Many other computer technologies languished on the sidelines for a few years before the groundbreaking new applications "clicked." Don't give up on these three just yet!

    14. Re:Technology by Sloppy · · Score: 1
      Not saying there is anything special about this president but next time try to pick one who has friends in industries you want to see funded because thats how this game works.
      So I guess that means that right now, we should be expecting huge advances in energy production. Cool, I'm off to Wal-Mart to buy a Mr. Fusion for my car.
      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    15. Re:Technology by dzoey · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It is sad. I often wonder why innovation has slowed so much. I don't think it's lack of money since there was plenty of innovation before the .COM bubble. It could be that the Pentagon is being more selective in its funding because there is less money to go around. This may be the real outcome of the Iraqi war. Exhausted government.

      --
      -- Everything is wonderful until you know something about it.
    16. Re:Technology by Aix · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Agreed, but the US government should be asking itself whether it can afford to have that breakthrough happen somewhere else. It is extremely foolish (and yet commonplace) to think that Americans have a monopoly on innovation.

    17. Re:Technology by 309east · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, none of the viable presidential candidates offer the option of selecting "combatitive relationship with industry".

    18. Re:Technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'd rather my president have a combatitive relationship with industry than a friendly relationship.

      Then you should vote for these guys.

    19. Re:Technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, the OP is clueless. And yet he is moderated 100% +2 insightful, imagine that. Seriously, government and military IT spending is increasing, not decreasing. So in this sector there is increased demand compared to the dot-com years.

    20. Re:Technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you got your friendly relationship when soon after the first inauguration the lawsuit against Microsoft was settled rather than pursued. But right now you have what happens when tax cuts are given without accompanying service cuts: some services eventually have to be cut. And funding research is not seen by short-sighted individuals (like those who want to privatize social security) as a threat to industry. Someone without much schooling might think cutting government-funded research is actually beneficial to industry. Since the industry can always do it by itself. Yeah, yeah. That's the ticket. Let's see those stem cells grow. Some others might point out that the United States' lead in the industry surrounding the Internet is a direct result of government funded research. But that wouldn't fit very well with the agenda of someone else who needs some quick funding cuts to help soften the damage being done by earlier irresponsible tax cuts. Or, to keep the $160 Billion dollar Iraq War of aggression from appearing to be the scam it is.

      Cost of War ($)

      Cost of War (lives)

      Note: the above two links are U.S.-centric.

    21. Re:Technology by Scott7477 · · Score: 1

      The US is so far ahead of other nations in terms of military technology that it can be considered reasonable to reduce spending for a time in the interest of reducing the federal budget deficit. Our most likely enemy, China, is 30 years behind us in military technology and the two gulf wars have shown the superiority of precision weapons over masses of infantry and tanks. India, which seems to be advancing faster, appears to be doing so because they have been so far behind.
      There is nothing stopping everyone who takes an interest in CS research from spending their time on a topic and doing the research. Full professors at a university don't spend 100% of their time doing research, they are supposed to do some teaching as well. You could do CS research and be a ski instructor to support yourself if you wished.
      Besides, the tech sector is busting because of excessive investment. Granted, a lot of that investment was stupid investment, but as the tech sector consolidates people who were employed in those stupid companies or the companies who lost competitively need to find some other line of work.
      The military budget is booming because we are fighting a war

      --
      "Lack of technical competence coupled with the arrogance of power, as usual, leads to no good end."
    22. Re:Technology by koreaman · · Score: 1

      They supported Kerry last election, so actually he probably did.

    23. Re:Technology by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      We are fighting "a" war to boom the military budget, as we always do. This time, though, the money is being invested in boondoggle weapons systems that don't target our actual military enemies: superficially terrorists, and more deeply the international energy interests battling over dwindling oil and pipeline rights of way. Which is why "we" are losing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan: those wars will now consume more money for the petromilitary corporations who control the government. While our greater vulnerability, economic, is neglected in a moribund investment economy and degenerating educational systems.

      Nothing's stopping CS researchers? What about cut budgets, the topic of this discussion? DoD investment in CS kept us strong through dual use, military and industrial, tech. Now we'll be fighting the wrong war, and conceding the right ones.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    24. Re:Technology by kisak · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Isn't helping getting funding for the breakthrough research that created among other things the internet, what Gore (somewhat clumsy) pointed out that he had done while in Congress? Funny ironi that the government is now "lead" by the the guy who seemed to make his whole election campaign on misrepresenting Gore's remark, and that this government lacks the vision of Gore to continue to fund this important research.

      --

      --- guns don't kill people, people with guns kill people ---

    25. Re:Technology by mattkinabrewmindspri · · Score: 1

      Well there's only a finite amount of money, and when he's dedicated so much to invading and occupying another country, yes, I think he did have a major role in this decision.

    26. Re:Technology by Rimbo · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Agreed, but the US government should be asking itself whether it can afford to have that breakthrough happen somewhere else. It is extremely foolish (and yet commonplace) to think that Americans have a monopoly on innovation.

      Funny you mention the word "monopoly."

      With Microsoft owning the applications, OS, development tools and (by extension) methodologies the overwhelming majority of the populace uses, that prevents researchers from implementing their ideas into the software most people see. There's been a complete lack of visibility for this research for the past fifteen years, because of Microsoft's monopoly. The cutting of projects is the obvious next step.

      The nationalistic decision by other countries to block Microsoft is what will allow those countries to eventually reap the benefits of higher-end research. The prime reason Linux is taking off is because researchers can implement their ideas in it; and if they want to replace the kernel wholesale, the GNU tools are there to turn the idea into an OS.

      Next thing you know, we Americans are wondering, "Why is all of the cool stuff on my computer coming from [insert foreign country here] when ten years ago it was all American?" Just like what happened in the home electronics industry in the 80's, when suddenly all the great stuff was Japanese...

      Seen KDE 3.4? It's already beyond Windows XP's interface, and it's starting to look and feel better than Panther's interface. This is not an American invention...

    27. Re:Technology by intnsred · · Score: 1

      and the two gulf wars have shown the superiority of precision weapons over masses of infantry and tanks.

      Who-hoo -- we beat Iraq. What a triumph! In 2002 we supposedly "beat" a nation which was under economic and military sanctions for a decade and which had its military decimated in 1991.

      The lesson we've learned? We've learned that all our costly high-tech war machines don't add up to anything.

      The Iraqi resistance is waging an effective war against the US using nothing but patriotism, bravery, and some old artillery shells wired up to a fuse which can be triggered by a cell phone.

      "Smart weapons" and even "smart generals" does not equate to victory if you have lying, immoral politicians invoking polices which abhor the world and which torture and create resistance among the people we're supposedly trying to disarm^H^H^H^H^H^H, err, I mean liberate.

      (I almost forgot the latest revision of the reason we went to war -- no longer WMD, certainly not oil, but instead freedom and democracy, mom and apple pie, and the human rights of the people that we're not torturing and sodomizing in Saddam's old prisons.)

    28. Re:Technology by tbradshaw · · Score: 1

      You know, both situations pretty much suck. Presidents that get combatative with industry tend to add rediculous and/or arbitrary restrictive executive-lead-legislation that slows progress and helps no one. Presidents that are buddy-buddy with industry tend to add rediculous and/or arbitrary restrictive executive-lead-legislation that crushes the citizens' rights for short term corporate gain. I want a President that is a particular flavor of both. I want a President that will assault corporate welfare, demand real results for govt contracts, and support the rights of the citizens' above everything else. Especially when those rights are in conflict with "corporate rights". Corporations have no inherent rights of any kind! I also want a President that's willing to support those industries that can and will "cut the mustard" all on their own. A government that will get out of the way when the private sector really gets moving, instead of making sure they keep one hand in. Well. Anyway. That's my favorite pipe dream. Well... my favorite that doesn't involve porn.

    29. Re:Technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget how Congress focuses on how every appropriations bill benefits their voters (more precisely, their re-election donors) The military budget is huge in part because those huge ticket items (who got the contracts by spreading the construction across as many states as possible) have been coming in way over budget and nowhere near on time. It is a huge surprise when any of them come anywhere close to the original bid. It has been a real surprise that a number of them are even being shutdown. Now the military is having to learn the costly lesson that destroying an enemy can be done mostly by air/remote control, but controlling/policing it takes human bodies.

    30. Re:Technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can pool your combatitive spelling skills to fight the power.

    31. Re:Technology by mike518 · · Score: 1

      Tech industry is moving slowly?!?

      Dear god, i wonder how many new ipods are released per quarter when things start picking up.

      --
      Mike
      I heart the RIAA & MPAA, im sure its mutual...
    32. Re:Technology by Niet3sche · · Score: 1

      Too late, we're rather far behind Russia and China (insofar as what is public information) regarding information transfer along covert channels (for instance). I am afraid that this is likely just one example in a long and losing chain.

    33. Re:Technology by DerekLyons · · Score: 1
      DARPA is a military agency. Them concentrating only on short-term military gains projects doesn't surprise me. However on the same count, NASA should NOT launch spy satellites. It is a civilian agency.
      NASA should not? NASA already doesn't. Never has.

      NASA has been hired a couple of time to do so by other arms of the goverment, but that kind of civil/military cross happens all the time. (For example NASA 'hires' various DoD components (I.E. military) to support manned launches (a civil mission).) But the vast majority of spy bitds have been launched by the USAF. None have been launched by NASA on it's own hook.

    34. Re:Technology by quarkscat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The solution to every Defense Department effort
      to get more bang for the buck -- outsourcing!
      We can always rely upon the Chinese and the
      Indians (and whoever comes cheapest next) for
      the core R&D in CS and IT we will need, right?

      The DoD has been in love with outsourcing since
      before some Pentagon stuffed shirts decided to
      buy uniforms (berets) from the PRC. For example:

      (a) they are having problems getting enough
      new USA-borne recruits -- solution (1) is to
      raise enlistment bonuses and pay (too much $$$);
      while solution (2) is to enlist more illegal
      aliens.

      (b) they are having problems retaining enough
      experienced air crews (in spite of the current
      recession in commercial air service) -- solution
      (1) is to raise re-enlistment bonuses; solution
      (2) is to pour money into UAVs and keep the
      pilots on the ground (controlled from anywhere).

      In the Dubya/Rumsfeld world, outsourcing is the
      answer to all labor/union/manpower issues. The
      increase in the number of foreigners in our military
      (, and whatever security risks that may entail,)
      is less of an issue than short term costs.

      Someone should remind our leadership that the
      Roman Empire ultimately failed because they
      also outsourced their military - a military
      that, in the end, they could not trust to
      protect the homeland.

    35. Re:Technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is the dumbest thing I have read all week. First, the U.S. is not that far ahead of other nations as far as technology. The reason we are able to do really cool things - like maintain a space program - is because we have an economy (albeit an economy in decline) that can support such programs. The same goes for the military.

      Second, the job of a professor depends on the University and their particular relationship with that University. Some professors spend most of their time researching, others teaching. Quite a bit of research is performed by PhD holders who are not professors. Those are the people about to get slammed. Much of our important research is performed at places like Argonne

    36. Re:Technology by shokk · · Score: 1

      Sad that the Pentagon, a miltary agency, has taken its hands out of a non-military project (i know, I know, it was once a military project in the even of a nuke attack)? Geez, guess its a bad thing for tax dollars to go where people say they are supposed to go to. Short-term military benefits sounds like the right business for the Pentagon to be in.

      Lets leave the CS R&D to universities and comporations rather than bits of my paycheck.

      --
      "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart, he dreams himself your master."
    37. Re:Technology by Forbman · · Score: 1

      Our most likely enemy, China, is 30 years behind us in military technology and the two gulf wars have shown the superiority of precision weapons over masses of infantry and tanks. India, which seems to be advancing faster, appears to be doing so because they have been so far behind.

      But for some reason I think there are a lot of French, and to a lesser extent, other European, military companies that would be more than happy to sell their tech to China, if just to shove a red hot poker up the US's ass, even if it means that the red hot poker might end up in their ass sometime later.

      Had Saddam Hussain not been so stupid, some of the tech he had bought from France, Germany, South Africa, et al. in '91 could have given the US a far rougher time than it did. But alas, he stranded his bullet sponges...er, cannon fodder...er, conscript infantry, in trenches for weeks, only to be pummeled relentlessly by B-52 carpet bombing and BLU-182 drops...

  2. free registration blah blah blah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    SAN FRANCISCO, April 1 - The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency at the Pentagon - which has long underwritten open-ended "blue sky" research by the nation's best computer scientists - is sharply cutting such spending at universities, researchers say, in favor of financing more classified work and narrowly defined projects that promise a more immediate payoff. Hundreds of research projects supported by the agency, known as Darpa, have paid off handsomely in recent decades, leading not only to new weapons, but to commercial technologies from the personal computer to the Internet. The agency has devoted hundreds of millions of dollars to basic software research, too, including work that led to such recent advances as the Web search technologies that Google and others have introduced. The shift away from basic research is alarming many leading computer scientists and electrical engineers, who warn that there will be long-term consequences for the nation's economy. They are accusing the Pentagon of reining in an agency that has played a crucial role in fostering America's lead in computer and communications technologies. "I'm worried and depressed," said David Patterson, a computer scientist at the University of California, Berkeley who is president of the Association of Computing Machinery, an industry and academic trade group. "I think there will be great technologies that won't be there down the road when we need them." University researchers, usually reluctant to speak out, have started quietly challenging the agency's new approach. They assert that Darpa has shifted a lot more work in recent years to military contractors, adopted a focus on short-term projects while cutting support for basic research, classified formerly open projects as secret and placed new restrictions on sharing information. This week, in responding to a query from the staff of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Darpa officials acknowledged for the first time a shift in focus. They revealed that within a relatively steady budget for computer science research that rose slightly from $546 million in 2001 to $583 million last year, the portion going to university researchers has fallen from $214 million to $123 million. The agency cited a number of reasons for the decline: increased reliance on corporate research; a need for more classified projects since 9/11; Congress's decision to end controversial projects like Total Information Awareness because of privacy fears; and the shift of some basic research to advanced weapons systems development. In Silicon Valley, executives are also starting to worry about the consequences of Darpa's stinting on basic research in computer science. "This has been a phenomenal system for harnessing intellectual horsepower for the country," said David L. Tennenhouse, a former Darpa official who is now director of research for Intel. "We should be careful how we tinker with it." University scientists assert that the changes go even further than what Darpa has disclosed. As financing has dipped, the remaining research grants come with yet more restrictions, they say, often tightly linked to specific "deliverables" that discourage exploration and serendipitous discoveries. Many grants also limit the use of graduate students to those who hold American citizenship, a rule that hits hard in computer science, where many researchers are foreign. The shift at Darpa has been noted not just by those researchers directly involved in computing technologies, but by those in other fields supported by the agency. "I can see they are after deliverables, but the unfortunate thing is that basic research gets squeezed out in the process," said Wolfgang Porod, director of the Center for Nano Science and Technology at the University of Notre Dame. The concerns are highlighted in a report on the state of the nation's cybersecurity that was released with little fanfare in March by the President's Information Technology Advisory Committee. Darpa has long focused on long-term basic research projects with time horizons that exc

    1. Re:free registration blah blah blah by notque · · Score: 1

      The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency at the Pentagon - which has long underwritten open-ended "blue sky" research by the nation's best computer scientists - is sharply cutting such spending at universities, researchers say, in favor of financing more classified work and narrowly defined projects that promise a more immediate payoff.

      Government Officials state that this was the same justification for war with Iraq, and opposed to allowing UN inspections which were working to continue.

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    2. Re:free registration blah blah blah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My eyes, they bleed at the sight of your paragraphless wall of words.

  3. sigh... by ocularDeathRay · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am not surprised but this is kind of sad. Lets stop open ended research that may help people in the future... instead we will spend that money on killing people in the short term.

    as great as this country is, it is sometimes frustrating to be an American

    --
    Obama is a twitter sock puppet
    1. Re:sigh... by Rostin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There are at least two false dilemmas, here.

      First, why do you assume that short-term military spending won't help people in the future? It's not at all obvious that having a powerful, technologically advanced military prevents us from helping people in the future. I would hope that the reverse is true, in fact.

      Second, do you think there's a compelling reason to believe that in the absence of military research, people would stop killing one another? Isn't it true that (at least in theory) having better, more accurate weapons means that we kill *fewer* people?

    2. Re:sigh... by ocularDeathRay · · Score: 1

      you make a good point that having a strong military may help people someday. I just think our priorities are a little strange sometimes. Anyhow... I really do hope you are right.

      --
      Obama is a twitter sock puppet
    3. Re:sigh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      great comment.. sure is frustrating

    4. Re:sigh... by AKAImBatman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      +5 insightful? People, this is *CompSci* we're talking about here. Think for a moment. What materials does a CompSci researcher need? A few thousand dollars worth of computing equipment? Maybe ten thousand a year in custom board manufacturing costs? Beyond that you're just talking about people's wages. This isn't chemistry or rocket science where rare and expensive materials are needed for experiments! This is computer science where 90-99% of the research is intellectual!

      Just think for a moment here. If they've got massive multi-million dollar budgets, where is all the research money going?

    5. Re:sigh... by snarkh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's not at all obvious that having a powerful, technologically advanced military prevents us from helping people in the future. I would hope that the reverse is true, in fact.


      The US already has the most advanced military and by far the largest military spending. Why is such an increase in military research nececessary at this point in time?

      Second, do you think there's a compelling reason to believe that in the absence of military research, people would stop killing one another?


      Who said anything about the absense of military research. The question is about the purpose of redirecting funds from long term CS research into short-term military spending.

    6. Re:sigh... by Stonehand · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. What should its priorities be, if not defense? Defense-related research should be its bread-and-butter; it needs to be done, and it's more logically their province rather than, say, the more-general NSF or the public-health NIH.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    7. Re:sigh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could also take a more constructive look at this as a focus for the short-term into saving the lives of the soldiers on the battlefield.

      I'm sure if you were to ask, most Americans would like to see our soldiers come home safe, and wouldn't mind putting off advanced CS research for a few years.

    8. Re:sigh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      um... to computers? At least in high performance computing, if your cluster costs less than a million, it's small-time. Not to mention that there are tremendous costs for replacing nodes that fail (which is mroe often than you'd think when you have thousands of nodes), power, and cooling of your server room.

      Any kind of experimental computer science is going to require machines to run on. And any kind of computer science is going to require money to fund graduate students.

    9. Re:sigh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Don't forgot that little thing called "Electricity", you may have heard of it.

      Clusters, Large scale systems, mainframes, all require it in mass quanities, and that costs $ $ $

    10. Re:sigh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Just think for a moment here. If they've got massive multi-million dollar budgets, where is all the research money going?"

      www.russianbrides.com

    11. Re:sigh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      huh? one grad student year at a private school is going to cost at least $75,000 and probably closer to $100,000 ... tutition, stipend, travel, overhead, etc. if you're a theory researcher, that might be it ... but darpa tends to fund big projects that deliver things: software or prototypes. i worked on a darpa funded project during my ph.d. in electrical engineering and we fabbed a 20 million transistor chip. yeah, the "custom board" (i.e. the PCB) might have cost $10,000, but the masks alone for the chip where $500,000. this is not to say the student costs are trivial ... the project probably took 20 grad student years. that's approaching $2 million just for the students.

      darpa's shift away from basic research really started several years ago ... it's a horrible idea. this combined with the tighter restrictions on student visas is going to undermine the U.S.'s technical dominance. this will ultimately reduce our global power way more than the lack of any weapons system ...

    12. Re:sigh... by lysander · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Beyond that you're just talking about people's wages.

      I think you're forgetting that a lot goes into this. If a professor gets a grant, he pays the school and his department for hosting him, for his own time, and for post-doc, graduate, and undergraduate students to work on the project. I would guess that the majority of the cost isn't in hardware, but in people's time. Who cares what kind of hardware is available if the project won't help pay your tuition? No money, no students, no research.

      --
      GET YOUR WEAPONS READY! --DR.LIGHT
    13. Re:sigh... by ScottSCY · · Score: 1

      "Just think for a moment here. If they've got massive multi-million dollar budgets, where is all the research money going?" I think you underestimate the cost of wages. What the change in funding essentially does is force professors and graduate students to research things the government wants instead of what they are interested in. Just at a single major university there are hundreds of grad students who essentially cost tuition+stipend every year (can be ~40,000 or more in many cases). Add to this hundreds of universities, equipment costs, etc, and the money starts to add up pretty quickly.

    14. Re:sigh... by jolande · · Score: 1

      Maybe it is just going to lots of research projects? If the cost is low, why not give out a ton of grants?

    15. Re:sigh... by cgenman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I fail to see how funding people's wages is any different than funding chemistry research. Where does most of the cost of refining chemicals come from? Wages to people for the slow and ardruous task of making them.

      If anything because the "90-99%" of the research is intellectual, it can be argued that more of the money goes to exactly what it is that you want more of.

      Plus you now have the problem that as more and more money goes into the corporate sector, fewer and fewer people benefit. While the military's relationship with higher education has always had a little tension, it's the right place for the funding to flow to. If you fund research into advanced data mining techniques using quantum computers at a college, the money goes to creating research that can be used by everyone, including corporations, individuals, and other research institutions. You contribute to the education of more computer science students. If you decide to go elsewhere for your follow-up project, you can take the body of research that was done and go anywhere. By relying on private corporations, all you're doing is subsidizing the CEO's golf club memberships and tying yourself to a single vendor.

      If they've got massive multi-million dollar budgets, where is all the research money going?

      I'm going to go out on a limb here and say "research." I've never seen an educational institution that was wasteful about it's funding (Maybe Harvard). The professors and grad students are paid wages that nobody in the private sector would accept. They don't have crazy offices or private jets or 100,000 dollar golf club memberships. When was the last time the head of a college recieved a 30 million dollar golden parachute?

      If you can't phathom where the research money is going, you are in no position to say that it is being wasted.

      DARPA has always been the blue-sky arm of the military funding group, and it has served the country well in that respect. The internet is it's most obvious triumph (which is also comp sci), and that took something like 30 years to catch on. They also funded BSD, nuclear test detection research, and a whole lot else. To say that they're going to fund practical immediate research for making weapons instead is a little silly, we have branches of the military and civillian companies who do this regularly. DARPA, however, funds projects that have a 1 in 100 chance of taking off and changing the world. And DARPA funds hundreds of them.

    16. Re:sigh... by techno-vampire · · Score: 1
      Isn't it true that (at least in theory) having better, more accurate weapons means that we kill *fewer* people?

      Not only that, but isn't it a good idea to find ways to make sure that less and less of the people killed are ours? Developing better armor for our solders and their vehicles costs money and saves their lives. Better intel helps us hit the enemy concentrations before they can hit us and better targetting systems help us do more damage with less munitions. All of this saves American lives. Isn't that something worth doing?

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    17. Re:sigh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US already has the most advanced military and by far the largest military spending. Why is such an increase in military research nececessary at this point in time?

      Because there's still room for improvement.

    18. Re:sigh... by Sloppy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Just what do you think the military is for? Killing people is their job, and its exactly the job we want them to do. Helping people is not.

      The only reason for the military to fund science, is to use it as a foundation for later military technology. Now, that doesn't mean our society as a whole can't put lots of effort into science, but let's just be honest about it, instead of funding it through taxes that are supposed to go into the military budget. Either fund it through a department of government that is honestly labelled as being science-oriented, or better yet, if people really care about science, then we can keep government out of it all together.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    19. Re:sigh... by servognome · · Score: 2, Informative

      I fail to see how funding people's wages is any different than funding chemistry research. Where does most of the cost of refining chemicals come from? Wages to people for the slow and ardruous task of making them.

      There is a big difference in initial and iterative costs for physical sciences vs computer science.
      For initial startup for CS a university may invest millions on new computer equipment for students to build and test their programs. In physical sciences a university may invest millions on a piece of equipment to run the experiment, but they also have to invest millions more on one or more metrologies to analyze the experiment and infrastructure for chemical delivery, chemical disposal system, chemcial storage. The cost of chemicals is not wage related, its the cost of buying them from companies, since it's essential that the chemicals you have are pure and consistant.
      The biggest difference is in the iterative costs. For CS the cost of iterations is relatively low, you just recompile your code, in physical sciences you have to consume more physical resources. Also in some fields such as Mat. Sci. or MechE, the university doesn't always have resources available to build what you need. So each time you want to do an experimental run, you have to pay for an outside company to create your metal ingot, or custom machine the part you need, which can quickly get very expensive

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
    20. Re:sigh... by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The US already has the most advanced military and by far the largest military spending. Why is such an increase in military research nececessary at this point in time?

      Mainly because much of what we have is designed to fight a straight up war with the (then) USSR. While that equipment is second to none in a normal fight, as the Iraqi's found out; it's not as well equipped for the future. Many of the thing sthat make it good for the cold war are less useful in urban fighting or fast reaction situation.

      Take the M1A1 tank - it's one fantastic killing machine if you are an enemy tank - heavy armor up front. accurate and powerful cannon to defeat enemy tanks as well as decimate infantry and any other softargtes. It'll do 40+ mph over rough plowed fields (but so will a rental car)to get to an engagemnet in the Fulda Gap. But that war is gone, and it isn't so well equiped for fighting in a city - like many tanks, its ass end is its weak spot - and an individual armed with an anti-tank weapon can pop out and shoot it in the rear.

      Much of the spending looks at transforming the military to fight a different war.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    21. Re:sigh... by tbo · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Disclosure: I'm a graduate student at a major research university, doing public research that happens to be funded in part by DARPA and the DoD. The research is long-term, but is in a field that will clearly have national security implications.

      I'm going to go out on a limb here and say "research." I've never seen an educational institution that was wasteful about it's funding (Maybe Harvard).

      Then you've never seen how research happens at a major university. Waste happens *differently* than at major corporations, but it happens in vast amounts, often in the form of wasted time.

      At a private company I used to work at, when there was a minor problem with my working environment (too cold), it took a day or two to fix. At a top-rated university, a more serious problem (lights that turn off by themselves every ten minutes) took seven months to fix.

      At the same company, security was taken very seriously. When the door to the server room was being repainted, we had a security guard stand there, literally watching paint dry. At the major university, we had five break-ins to our building last semester and yet it's still possible to break in in 15 seconds with nothing more than a newspaper. (The last of those break-ins cost the university about $10,000 in computer equipment, and it took four months to get the computers replaced and running again).

      I haven't even started on the amount of time wasted on pointless administrative tasks (e.g. two weeks telling payroll how to do their jobs).

      The professors and grad students are paid wages that nobody in the private sector would accept. They don't have crazy offices or private jets or 100,000 dollar golf club memberships.

      Professors don't get crazy bonuses, but the top administrators get pretty hefty salaries and bonuses (like a beautiful house on campus). Compensation for administrators is approaching corporate levels.

      Plus, universities find lots of ways to sphon off federal grant money. Any major purchase or salary coming from a federal grant gets a ~50% "overhead" charge tacked on--that money goes to the university.

      It literally hurts me to see DARPA cut funding to universities (my group took a hit), but I can understand why it's happening.

    22. Re:sigh... by Dun+Malg · · Score: 2, Interesting
      At a private company I used to work at, when there was a minor problem with my working environment (too cold), it took a day or two to fix. At a top-rated university, a more serious problem (lights that turn off by themselves every ten minutes) took seven months to fix.

      Total tangent here, but my father used to work for Hughes Aircraft Company (back when they still existed) and the numbnuts facilities manager of the building in which he worked, in an attempt to "save electricity" and earn some brownnose points, decided to replace all the office light switches with motion sensor switches to turn off the lights when no one was there. Well, in a building full of engineers where they frequently spent hours at a time making notes or calculations by hand on paper (this was the 70's), those motion sensors would shut off the lights because an angineer writing at his desk wasn't moving enough to trigger the sensor. In the end, two hundred-odd irate engineers made a variety of breeze-driven "movement generators"-- everything from a single sheet of paper on a string to complex windmills and mobiles-- and hung them from the AC/heat vents. In order for them to work, they had to have constant air flow so they kept the blower fans running all day. So the final result was a net LOSS, as the lights still stayed lit, but the fans ran all day every day instead of intermittently. Sometimes nothing wastes like conservation.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    23. Re:sigh... by glitch23 · · Score: 0

      Better and more accurate weapons in theory means we kill fewer people but there may be reasons for why we are more apt to use them (maybe even thinking less people would die) and because we end up using them more we kill more people. By knowing what may happen in the future we do our best to avoid it and end up doing exactly what was needed to make what we thought might happen actually happen (like in the movie Paycheck).

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    24. Re:sigh... by notque · · Score: 1

      I forgot, as soon as you bring religion into the arguement, you are trolling.

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    25. Re:sigh... by pilkul · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The US already has the most advanced military and by far the largest military spending. Why is such an increase in military research nececessary at this point in time?

      The US military is currently overstreched doing peacekeeping in two medium-sized countries. "Most advanced military" in the world doesn't necessarily cut it when you're up against several opponents at once and when you have more complex objectives than merely destroying your enemies (crushing Saddam's army was trivial, building a democracy is another matter). Moreover, as someone pointed out current military technology is still largely oriented on cold war situations.

    26. Re:sigh... by nystagman · · Score: 1
      At a private company I used to work at, when there was a minor problem with my working environment (too cold), it took a day or two to fix. At a top-rated university, a more serious problem (lights that turn off by themselves every ten minutes) took seven months to fix.

      So... you're comparing your n=1 for industry vs. your n=1 for academia to justify the conclusion?

      FWIW, I've also worked in both, and the experiences have just sharpened my agreement with Sturgeon's Law, regardless of venue.

      --
      Theory and practice are the same in theory, but different in practice.
    27. Re:sigh... by timeOday · · Score: 1

      If "Defense" is so important to the charter, they should make up their mind about keeping it in the name.

    28. Re:sigh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Defense? Oh, you mean invading other countries on false pretexts.

    29. Re:sigh... by torpor · · Score: 1

      The US already has the most advanced military and by far the largest military spending. Why is such an increase in military research nececessary at this point in time?

      to prop up the festering economy, of course, duh. all those munitions gotta come from some mid-west venture ..

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    30. Re:sigh... by Forbman · · Score: 1

      (but so will a rental car)

      Uh, no it won't. And an M-1, with the governors removed, can do 60mph+ on the road or in the open desert.

      Have you tried walking through a rough plowed field lately?

    31. Re:sigh... by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      Uh, no it won't. And an M-1, with the governors removed, can do 60mph+ on the road or in the open desert.

      Have you tried walking through a rough plowed field lately?


      Have you checked your humor filter lately? It may be stripping some tags.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    32. Re:sigh... by tbo · · Score: 1

      So... you're comparing your n=1 for industry vs. your n=1 for academia to justify the conclusion?

      The university is considered by many independent rankings to be one of the best in the country and perhaps the world. The company (which, incidentally, primarily did software, and reminded me a lot of Dilbert), on the other hand, is barely hanging on, and survived the dot com crash only by way of a fortuitious (for them--not for the investors) influx of money right before everything went south.

      In other words, I took one of the best universities around, and compared it to a typical-to-poor software company. The fact that the company wins in many ways tells you something.

    33. Re:sigh... by Cistern64 · · Score: 1

      Just out of curiousity, how do you break in to an unversity armed with a newspaper?

  4. Well... by sabernet · · Score: 5, Informative

    While this does royally suck, we cannot forgot DARPA is a defense agency after all. And in the modern, "Make war, not talk" times of the current administration, this was almost forseeable.

    1. Re:Well... by flyingsquid · · Score: 5, Funny
      Well, like they say, it's killing the goose that lays the golden eggs. Maybe this move can get some new weapons system out there a few months earlier, but in the meantime, you're not inventing the technologies which permit whole new classes of weapons systems.

      I'll put it in StarCraft terms: you're spending your minerals on upgrading your Zealots, and failing to invest in the pylons and tech structures that would allow you to build a whole frickin' fleet of Protoss Carriers.

    2. Re:Well... by Stonehand · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The military does not really have a problem finding "whole new classes of weapons systems" to research for the long term. It's rather the other way around, if you look at something like Future Combat Systems -- an extremely expensive, quite possibly pie-in-the-sky redesign that goes against decades of military thinking which will require success in a rather large number of utterly unproven technologies to work. Lightweight, lightly armored heavily networked vehicles complimented by large numbers of mobile attack / recon robots?

      It's the people outside the Pentagon pointing out that the money spent on futuristic weapons systems will hurt the ability to find funding for shorter-term but still rather useful projects.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    3. Re:Well... by katharsis83 · · Score: 1

      "I'll put it in StarCraft terms: you're spending your minerals on upgrading your Zealots, and failing to invest in the pylons and tech structures that would allow you to build a whole frickin' fleet of Protoss Carriers."

      I've never seen America's entire long-term defense planning reduced down to one sentence about StarCraft.

      Apt analogy though.

    4. Re:Well... by Jameth · · Score: 1

      Still, it shows the idiocy of the system. Listen to what they say is revolutionizing warfare. Everyone is praising the benefits of connectivity with the battlefield brought about by all this information technology that they have. That came about due to DARPA funding internet research. An open-ended CS program. It's plain stupid to find the thing that has most greatly benefited you recently and then remove its source.

    5. Re:Well... by techno-vampire · · Score: 1
      It's plain stupid to find the thing that has most greatly benefited you recently and then remove its source.

      True, as far as it goes. However, we already have that and we haven't developed its full potential yet. Finding new ways to use all our battlefield connectivity will help in the short run, more obviously than long-term research will. For people who don't understand that there's nothing more practical than basic research it looks like the way to go. They can see the potential, and think they're getting more bang for their bucks so that's the way they go.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    6. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is my firm belief that ANYTHING can be reduced down to one sentence about StarCraft.

    7. Re:Well... by TorKlingberg · · Score: 0

      I'll put it in StarCraft terms: you're spending your minerals on upgrading your Zealots, and failing to invest in the pylons and tech structures that would allow you to build a whole frickin' fleet of Protoss Carriers.

      As a non-american, I'd rather see you doing something about your zealots than building a fleet of carriers.

    8. Re:Well... by flyingsquid · · Score: 1
      if you look at something like Future Combat Systems -- an extremely expensive, quite possibly pie-in-the-sky redesign that goes against decades of military thinking which will require success in a rather large number of utterly unproven technologies to work. Lightweight, lightly armored heavily networked vehicles complimented by large numbers of mobile attack / recon robots?

      See, in the computer game analogy, Future Combat Systems is Duke Nukem Forever...

    9. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      As a non-american, I'd rather see you doing something about your zealots than building a fleet of carriers.

      And as an American, I hereby append a drumroll and rimshot to your humorous/serious comment.

    10. Re:Well... by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 1

      As any good starcraft player will tell you you are much better opff upgrading your zealots on most maps. Carriers are only usefull in limited circumstances -- in games that have lasted a while and reached an impasse, or against an opponent that completely ignores anti-air capabilities.

      But zealots usually win 10 games for every one won by carriers, so you are much better off spending on your zealots. So you have got a false analogy there.

      Sorry, don't mean to be an asshole, but I just miss Starcraft so much :).

  5. Totally believable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    with bushie in office. I guess he's scared of "the internets"

  6. excellent. by notque · · Score: 3, Funny

    This means they are going to use this money instead of fund the radically out of control social security right?

    It's in serious need... They should get to that.

    --
    http://use.perl.org
    1. Re:excellent. by Jameth · · Score: 1

      "It's in serious need... They should get to that."

      Indeed, it is in serious need. After all, it will only last another 30 years on this system.

      Now, how could we get enough money to keep something solvent thirty years from now...hmmm...that seems like a rather long-term goal...hmmm...oh, wait, we could fund something open-ended, as we did with the internet, and start up another economic boom through innovation somewhere down the line, like around ten years from now when the whole system stops resulting in positive returns and begins sliding towards uselessness.

    2. Re:excellent. by notque · · Score: 1

      Indeed, it is in serious need. After all, it will only last another 30 years on this system.

      It doesn't suddenly die in 30 years. It will remain for long after that as long as the egotistic and selfish among us don't kill it.

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    3. Re:excellent. by Jameth · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you did not catch the sarcasm?

      However: after another thirty years, it will no longer be completely solvent, assuming that population and income projections hold true. Up until that point, all social security payments will be made on time. Thus, that's when it no longer is a working system, as the purpose of the system is to make all the payments, not just a few.

    4. Re:excellent. by notque · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you did not catch the sarcasm?

      I'm dense sometimes :)

      However: after another thirty years, it will no longer be completely solvent, assuming that population and income projections hold true. Up until that point, all social security payments will be made on time. Thus, that's when it no longer is a working system, as the purpose of the system is to make all the payments, not just a few.

      And what is the catalyst for the problems with Social Security?

      What is the real problem? Is it just lack of money coming in versus going out?

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    5. Re:excellent. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This means they are going to use this money instead of fund the radically out of control social security right?

      Don't you worry, my friend! They'll be using those new weapons on those radicals in Social Security, soon enough.

    6. Re:excellent. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Ummm... the US is famous around the world for having one of the most cut-down, frugal Social Security programmes to be found anywhere. There is something seriously wrong if it is "out of control".

  7. zerg by Lord+Omlette · · Score: 4, Funny

    Great! We didn't want to compete w/ India anyway...

    --
    [o]_O
    1. Re:zerg by NitsujTPU · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There's a big difference between funding CS research, and competing with the code for hire shops in India.

      DARPA funds quite a bit of research that is a long way from becoming technology that we use in our homes. Many papers that I read that are funded by DARPA, I read with the realization that I won't see a practical system do these things for at least 10 years, probably much longer.

      That said, there are a few other things to say:
      1) The D in DARPA is for defense... many of these projects get into places that are hard to tie directly to defence.
      2) Most of the work is publicly published, companies in India would have it anyway.
      3) It really is a problem that they are cutting this money. Universities desparately need it. It is hard to find funding for everything that needs to get done. Somebody needs to fund it.
      4) DARPA probably gets much more bang out of their buck for university research funding than they do internal projects. I know it cost quite a bit more to run projects at my contract house than it does to get projects funded at a University. All the U is looking for is money to run the lab and pay the students' tuition and stipends. There is significantly more overhead for contractors.

    2. Re:zerg by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      Great! We didn't want to compete w/ India anyway...
      You don't get it. With reduced funding, all your defense research are belong to India.
    3. Re:zerg by jimpop · · Score: 1

      "The 'D' in DARPA stands for Defence"

      No it doesn't, at least not in the USA. :-)

      Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency

    4. Re:zerg by Frumious+Wombat · · Score: 1

      Because they don't understand a knowledge-based economy, but they do understand extractive industries, subsidized agriculture, and heavy-manufacturing.

      It's actually a general problem with staffing a government with people over a certain age; I'm sure they have days that they look out the windows and wonder where all of the fedoras on men, and tail-fins on cars, went. Then they get back to work making sure that that marvelous age never goes away. 30 years from now, when everything is bio-quantum computing, and custom nano-assembled, there will be people worrying about our surface-mounted chip and CISC computing capabilities.

      --
      the more accurate the calculations became, the more the concepts tended to vanish into thin air. R. S. Mulliken
    5. Re:zerg by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 1

      Because during Vietnam there was the Soviet Union. People in the government were genuinely affraid of the Soviet Union and that forced them to get things done.

      After the Soviet Union fell there is nothing to be affraid of anymore so everyone now treats government as a way of getting rich.

  8. Time for a fed Dept of Information Technology by PrvtBurrito · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I believe strongly that the feds should consolidate their IT into a department of Technology or IT. I know that the NIH (HHS), the NSF, the DoD and the DOE commonly fund IT research, but it often doesn't fit into their missions. Our gov't should support Technology development and infrastructure just like it supports health (HHS), transportation (DoT), Energy (DoE), Science (NSF), security (HS) and defense (DoD). Who is going to build the next public cyberinfrastructure if it isn't appropriate for the other departments?

    --
    Laboratree - Scientific collaboration based on OpenSocial.
    1. Re:Time for a fed Dept of Information Technology by ezeri · · Score: 1

      I know companies are "evil" and all that, but umm, I'm pretty sure they will be the ones to build the next public cyberinfrastructure, considering they built the first one and all.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    2. Re:Time for a fed Dept of Information Technology by Danathar · · Score: 1

      NSF has a whole division for that...it's called the Division of Shared Cyberinfrastructure.

      http://www.nsf.gov/div/index.jsp?div=SCI

  9. Spending cut, scientists outraged; news at 11 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Leading computer scientists, such as David Patterson, the head of the ACM are outraged and worried."


    Of course computer scientists are outraged at a cut in spending on computer science. It'd be more of a story if they instead supported the new spending plans.

  10. Note Self... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Change that computer app designed to feed the world into a laser-guidance missile control program to kill all those hungry poor fuckers.

    1. Re:Note Self... by kfg · · Score: 1

      Then eat them.

      KFG

  11. I guess someone important finally watched by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    all 3 Terminator movies in a row and clued in after a night of hard thinking that "Skynet v0.8" was too suspiciouly named to continue to v1.0.

  12. Should I be worried? by AKAImBatman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The problem is that Computer Science hasn't advanced much since the 80's. All the core concepts have been long established, and precious little groundbreaking research has emerged. I hate to say it, but most of the valuable work being done today is at the commercial level. i.e. Building upon the CompSci foundations to create useful, real world products.

    The biggest area that I see research being useful is in artificial intelligence. There's so much that we;re still trying to comprehend about emergent behaviors. Unfortunately, AI is very much like Fusion. It's only 20 years away (for the next century). :-) Not that I begrudge the AI research. It's fascinating stuff and deserves to be done. Just don't expect any sort of immediate results.

    1. Re:Should I be worried? by braindead · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah that's right, nothing came out of CS research in the last 20 years, everything's been already invented. To take just one example, this whole web thing of the 90s should not count for anything. CS research is worthless, real progress comes from companies like Google or Akamai. Oh wait... both came to us straight from the university (Stanford and MIT, respectively).

    2. Re:Should I be worried? by The_Bagman · · Score: 1

      Computer science has had unbelievable advances in the past decades, and not just in AI:

      - parallel computing and supercomputing
      - the Web
      - scalable clusters and Internet services
      - mobile computing
      - breakthroughs in graphics
      - breakthroughs in vision
      - stunning advancements in computer architecture
      - fundamental advances in theory, algorithms, etc.

      It's true that the 50s, 60s, and 70s were wonderful in that many concepts were first discovered, but computer science had its greatest impact over the past two decades. Think of it this way: in the 70s, nearly nobody had touched a computer, let alone us having our national infrastructure depend on computing and internetworking!

    3. Re:Should I be worried? by AKAImBatman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      To take just one example, this whole web thing of the 90s should not count for anything.

      *Ahem* From your own link: The Web can be traced back to a project at CERN in 1989.

      CS research is worthless

      Didn't say that. I did say that there's not as much value as their used to be. The field is well saturated, and therefore is less likely to be much to be gained through expensive research. And as I also said, there's still research that's valuable, just far less overall.

      real progress comes from companies like Google or Akamai. Oh wait... both came to us straight from the university (Stanford and MIT, respectively).

      And how many millions of dollars did it take for PageRank to go from the start of research to an algorithm on paper? (Actually, I'd be quite interested to know. I'd expect that it probably wasn't more than a few thousand dollars.)

    4. Re:Should I be worried? by kb9vcr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The whole purpose of long-term research isn't to bang out invention after invention. It's an investment in the future of the technology.

      Inventioning things that aren't apparent and obvious but which are useful and ground breaking is all about funding ideas which usually don't pan out. If your not willing to spend money to try risky ideas then the technology that might have been 20 or 60 years off will NEVER come.

    5. Re:Should I be worried? by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The whole purpose of long-term research isn't to bang out invention after invention. It's an investment in the future of the technology.

      I understand that quite well. But I'm still not seeing amazing new algorithms that have future potential in many areas. AI seems to be the most promising, with most other areas of research trying to tackle the same sorts of problems without AI.

      Beyond AI, I have a very difficult time coming up with CompSci advances in the last decade. The BWT algo, Bayesian Filters, and that's about where I run out.

    6. Re:Should I be worried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DARPA has announced today that they haved finished the primary development of Artificial Intelligence, and can now cut funding to unscrupulous, deceived research lackeys. (It is said you cannot con an honest person.) They will now wrap up the loose ends using only classified or NDA technologies. Open society was always just a lie designed to lure the idiot public with its false sense of security into manufacturing its own demise - in the form of beyond-their-comprehension intelligence and weapons systems. Extermination likely to begin on 100th anniversary of first world war. AI not enemy as all media programs people to believe, but deceptive elite who benefit from all technologies not publicly released are. $500 million per year and still no comprehensive open source meal planner evidence... 60% cancer preventable with improved diet. You make the inference. This is my first post. At this rate, maybe my last.

    7. Re:Should I be worried? by AKAImBatman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      - parallel computing and supercomputing

      Experimented with and designed in the 70's and 80's. Commercially available in the 90's.

      - the Web

      Experimented with and designed in the 80's. Commercially available in the 90's.

      - scalable clusters and Internet services

      Experimented with and designed in the 80's. Commercially available in the 90's.

      - mobile computing

      Commercially available since the 80's. Lowering costs of commercial hardware made mobile devices more popular in the 90's and 00's.

      - breakthroughs in graphics

      All designed in the 60's through 80's, but lacking in powerful enough hardware until the late 90's.

      - breakthroughs in vision

      ???

      - stunning advancements in computer architecture

      Eh? What stunning advancements? Most of the architectures in use today go all the way back to the early 70's. They've merely become commercially available to the average Joe in recent years.

      - fundamental advances in theory, algorithms, etc.

      *What* fundamental advances? Name them!

    8. Re:Should I be worried? by be-fan · · Score: 1

      And 1989 isn't in the last 20 years?

      Anybody in the computing industry who thinks CS research has been stagnent for 20 years is most likely one of those moronic "computer engineers" that's still trying to get their heads around 1980s concepts, and ignoring all the new stuff. The sad state of commercial products today is fair testament to that.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    9. Re:Should I be worried? by kfg · · Score: 1

      I hate to say it, but most of the valuable work being done today is at the commercial level. i.e. Building upon the CompSci foundations to create useful, real world products.

      I haven't seen a commercial product that paid the slightest attention to CompSci foundations in years, leaving them with the sort of saleable "usefulness" that pleases the marketing department, but a bit lacking in the sort of usefulness that "gets shit done."

      The best thing about this is that you can keep selling the same "product" over and over again by adding kludges to your kludges to "fix" obvious flaws in usefulness.

      But we end with "lickable" kludgeballs out of the deal, so everyone is "happy" about the situation.

      The vast majority of people involved in computing these days earn their livings by tossing stones over a wall, back and forth to each other. This is not "useful" in the old fashioned sense of useful being somehow productive, instead of being merely an excuse to issue a paycheck to "stimulate the economy."

      "Just don't expect any sort of immediate results."

      Well yes, that's the whole point of research, isn't it? As often as not the most far reaching research doesn't even have any idea whether or not it might turn out to be "good for something" while it's being conducted and there's simply no way to tell in advance which water contains the baby when you start throwing it out.

      Perhaps you are unaware of what little actual research is still going on because of your focus on "usability" and "immediate results."

      Not that it matters much in the current climate, the DARPA annoucement pretty much just codifies the defacto status of damned little actual research being done these days, and if CompSci isn't dead it's at least on a feeding tube, so we might just as well put the money into something "useful," like "smarter" bombs.

      I'm not actually averse to this, despite the tenor of my post. I've never been particularly happy about the Defense Department being a major funder of computer research. This move can only result in a search for funding from alternate sources and a freeing up of research direction.

      It could move CompSci research back to an academic field conducted in the universities, if the universities themselves hadn't already forgotten what CompSci was and devolved into Java trade schools, because Java is "useful."

      KFG

    10. Re:Should I be worried? by ThetaPi · · Score: 1

      Remember, the artificial inteligence field isn't just about creating a sentient computer, it is also about finding new solutions to computationally difficult problems.

      The research of today may be the foundation of many of the algorithms we will using in twenty years.

      --
      "When God kisses Satan and the Incarnations applaud." "Death is dead. Long live Death!"
    11. Re:Should I be worried? by braindead · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It looks like we found the root of the problem. You're looking at technology that's widely available today and say "all that was invented 20 years ago, there's nothing new going on".

      The problem is that it takes 20 years for many fundamental advances to make it into mainstream. So the fundamental research that you claim is not happening? You'll see it in 20 years, when it will be mainstream.

    12. Re:Should I be worried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      *What* fundamental advances? Name them!

      Firm semantical foundations, the Pi-Calculus, Game Semantics, Full Abstraction results for various languages, Zero Knowledge Proofs, Breakthroughs in Program Logics (Separation Logic, Honda-Logics), Proof-Carrying Code, Model-Checking.

    13. Re:Should I be worried? by AKAImBatman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Hi KFG!

      I haven't seen a commercial product that paid the slightest attention to CompSci foundations in years, leaving them with the sort of saleable "usefulness" that pleases the marketing department, but a bit lacking in the sort of usefulness that "gets shit done."

      While I agree with your general complaint, allow me to point something out:All modern computer products are based upon the CompSci foundations laid out by researchers years ago. They don't have to pay much attention to CompSci theory, because the APIs, hardware, OSes, and Virtual Machines do all the work for them.

      That being said, there are a lot of idiots in the field who cheated or slept their way through CompSci. (Or perhaps they were taught the "marketable" brand of "Comp[Not]Sci") That, however, is a separate problem from scientific research.

      It could move CompSci research back to an academic field conducted in the universities, if the universities themselves hadn't already forgotten what CompSci was and devolved into Java trade schools, because Java is "useful."

      The sad truth, however, is that it's happening in ALL fields. For example, most of the crack aerospace and nuclear engineers I've talked to have iterated the same complaint as you. The only difference is that they're speaking about their own field instead of CompSci. Feel safer about flying yet? ;-)

    14. Re:Should I be worried? by Jameth · · Score: 1

      Note that most of what you mentioned was invented in the 80's and then used in the 90's. Therefore, it seems possible some stuff invented in the 90's still hasn't become available

      Also:

      - stunning advancements in computer architecture

      Eh? What stunning advancements? Most of the architectures in use today go all the way back to the early 70's. They've merely become commercially available to the average Joe in recent years.

      The Cell Architecture is new, as was the Emotion Engine. The Crusoe/Efficeon stuff was also new, although it didn't really pan out. I think that the design of the Blue Gene systems is also fairly new.

    15. Re:Should I be worried? by Adams4President · · Score: 1

      blue lasers, linux, real player...um, wait, scratch that last one...

    16. Re:Should I be worried? by braindead · · Score: 1

      well put. Mod parent up!

    17. Re:Should I be worried? by CharlesEGrant · · Score: 3, Informative
      Beyond AI, I have a very difficult time coming up with CompSci advances in the last decade. The BWT algo, Bayesian Filters, and that's about where I run out.
      There is a difference between saying that you don't know of any important CompSci advances and saying that there have been no such advances. What field do you work in? What other fields do you follow? What research journals do you read on a regular basis? If you are just reading textbooks and the popular and semi-popular press you are only going to hear about the ideas that have been pretty well thrashed out in the research literature and so are probably already 5-10 years old.

      How about the entire field of non-supervised machine learning: support vector machines, and training of hidden Markov models? These methods are finding application in everything from spam filtering to speech recognition to genome analysis.
    18. Re:Should I be worried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      - fundamental advances in theory, algorithms, etc. *What* fundamental advances? Name them!
      Elliptic Curve Cryptography.
    19. Re:Should I be worried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Computer Architecture is an incredibly dynamic field. I've taken the first year grad class at UIUC with http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1558 606041/qid=1112474172/sr=8-2/ref=pd_csp_2/102-3779 381-0316957?v=glance&s=books&n=507846/ as the book, and it's only near the end it gets into processors and systems available a few years ago, like the P4 and the intricacies involved in making a massive cluster be efficient. I cannont begin to comprehend what the next classes will be, and what sort of papers are being published, but I guarantee that apart from transistor based logic most of the architecture in use does not go back to the early 70's, as nearly all modern processors are RISC based (the Pentium just uses a CISC interface, it's all RISC internally).

    20. Re:Should I be worried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't entirely disagree with you, much of the foundational work in modern CS was established a while ago. And much of modern academic CS seems concerned with applications and 'relevancy' over research and innovation - hence the complaint that undergrad CS is often simply Java vocational training. But there are avenues of research that are genuinely novel. ..in no particular order
      Cell Matrices
      Quantum computation
      molecular computation
      The various informatics disciplines ( bio,eco,finance et.al.)
      neuronal computation
      complexity, synthetic modelling.

      You can argue that some of these areas aren't CS a/o have some tie to older research, but I think that they should still be regarded as novel and their relationship to computability and logic brings them into the domain of CS.

      Frankly I think that the pressure to fuse CS and 'IT' has diluted CS research. IT is not a scientific discipline and CS is not an engineering discipline.

    21. Re:Should I be worried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly why research should be funded.
      You're also listing things that would not have been tagged as "stunning" when they were researched. What makes you think that research done today will not turn into "stunning advancements" later. As I can see from out history, "stunning advancements" were always reluctantly accepted in the beginning:

      The Internet: Initially a defense project that was simply targetted at designing a no-single-point-of-failure network.

      Clusters: A crazy guy that wanted to build supercomputers with PCs. Mind you, the software infrastructure to support clusters is still far from being perfect. Yes, I do work with them.

      Mobile computing: Yeah, right. A PC on the go. Who would want that? After all, 640K should be enough.

      There are plenty of new things also; it's just that our ignorance has grown bigger.

    22. Re:Should I be worried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's an AC, and we don't like their kind.
      Oh, wait...

    23. Re:Should I be worried? by nonicenamesleft · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Eh? What stunning advancements? Most of the architectures in use today go all the way back to the early 70's. They've merely become commercially available to the average Joe in recent years.

      I'll name just one since you just need an example - http://www.cc.gatech.edu/news/palem.pdfpbits.

      Stuff that the grandparent missed:
      1. Quantam computing
      2. Formal verification of systems: Born in 60s and 70s to likes of Djikstra and Lamport, revived in late 80s and early 90s, used in hardware design today. Still a lot to do for software design.

      Yes, compilers, wired networks and OS have been pretty stagnant as far as research is considered - and thats what computer engineers think computer science is. And sci-fi fans add AI to the list.

    24. Re:Should I be worried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well put. Just a couple of days ago /. had a busy thread full of people who can't get their heads around 1960s concepts.

    25. Re:Should I be worried? by Yokaze · · Score: 1

      - Turbo codes
      - Advances in Wireless communication
      - Probabalistic algorithms
      - Fixed parameter tractability
      - Various other approximation algorithms
      - Parallel algorithms
      - Multidimensional indexing and accessing
      - P2P
      - String Matching and indexing algorithms (for genetics)
      - Quantum computing and algorithms, which (maybe) resulted in a whole new set of complexity classes in complexity theory.

      Yes. Most of those fields did exist before. So did the research of DNA exist at least since 1953. Does that make the advances in genetics in the last decade any less fundamental?

      Isn't the sequencing possible because of the late advances in CS?

      --
      "Between strong and weak, between rich and poor [...], it is freedom which oppresses and the law which sets free"
    26. Re:Should I be worried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Important for the DoD?
      -Encryption
      -Networks (wireless and otherwise)
      -Reliable wireless networking (multiroutes/quick route adaptation when a node goes down or is jammed/ Authentication/authentication for routing decision)
      -AI
      -Robotics
      -Software engineering methods for creating reliable software for large-scale systems.
      -Reliable, resilient and self recovering distributed systems. It's a whole new ballgame when parts of your infrastructure can be literally destroyed, and the rest of the system has to recover from losing processes.

      And so on.

      Of course, the other result of this will be an even further reduction of the number of americans in graduate programs in CS. DARPA only gives funding to americans, and the Principal Investigator has to ensure that no foreigners/foreign grad students touch the research. No such restrictions are placed on other programs, just get the research done. There are already very few americans in CS, and removing this source of funding will only decrease that proportion. Not that I'm complaining, I did my PhD in the states with a grant from the NSF (I'm not american)

    27. Re:Should I be worried? by kfg · · Score: 1

      Please forgive me, but in my precoffee fog I started channeling Dijkstra, but in my precoffee fog could not convey his eloquence.

      However, I will continue and point out that there is no particular value in relying on hardware, OSs and APIs that themselves have little to no regard for CompSci theory beyond the minimal practical value of "working," for sufficiently small values of working.

      The issue of design practices cannot be evaded by dropping to a lower level, because things are still "designed" by the commericial entities at that level, and for purely commercial purposes.

      Witness the kludgeball that constitutes the Windows APIs, complete with system level patches to "fix" bugs in applications.

      "Behave as x, unless you are running game foo, in which case behave as y, unless bar is also running, in which case, screw it and hang. It serves the user right for trying that."

      The sad truth, however, is that it's happening in ALL fields.

      I am nominally a physicist/engineer, not a CompSci guy. A few weeks ago I had to spend a considerable amount of time explaining the basics of Newton's Laws of Motion to an "experienced" mechanical "engineer." It was a bit saddening, but common enough now that I have ceased to be shocked by it anymore.

      I've already posted how my locomotive building SO will no longer ride on Amtrack rolling stock of certain vintages, she now knows too much about how they are designed and constructed.

      I know to much about how my car is designed and constructed. I prefer bicycles of my own construction these days; and I'm learning shoemaking.

      I'm becoming a "Luddite" through being too well versed in the technology, rather than through any objection to it.

      KFG

    28. Re:Should I be worried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Elliptic Curve Cryptography really doesn't buy you anything more than convential public key crypography gets you other than a shorter key length for the same strength. Covential public key cryptography was invented in the mid to late 1970s. The key length issue hasn't been a big deal as factoring algorithms haven't advanced by leaps and bounds. Saving a hundred bytes or so is more of an evolution rather than a big advance.

    29. Re:Should I be worried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Although quantam computing has made a lot of progress, it still not really here. Besides, the basis for the field was laid at least 20 years ago.

      2. Formal verification of systems hasn't really made any progress. It is used in hardware design because the cost of making mistakes is so high. Otherwise, it's pretty much in the same state as it was in the 1980s. Heck, the verification schemes for security software are pretty much unchanged. The orange book, which was written in the 1980s has pretty much been adopted under the nomer Common Criteria.

    30. Re:Should I be worried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is between evolution and a big step. When the electron microscope was invented, it was a big step for science. By imaging things at a far smaller level of detail, insight was added to many things. CS seems to have settled into an evolutionary period. It's important to a lot of fields, but the fields aren't being driven by advances in CS.

    31. Re:Should I be worried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      breakthroughs in vision

      Now, while I am sure that the parent post was referring to computer vision (which you can easily Google or just check out the MIT CS homepage for), I will take it a bit further. I have done research on artificial vision for the blind with my EE/CS background, which is something you would expect to see someone in pre-med doing. Not all CS people work on computers. However, they are paid as computer scientists.

      As far as advances, I will remove the word "fundamental" because that muddles things up as far as what "fundamental" means to science, especially a relatively "young" science.

      First and foremost would be cryptography. Do you realize how many computer scientists work on cryptography, even out of the context of quantum computing? Now, while many of the advances in this area aren't public, we are talking about government and military here, where we aren't looking at the strength of triple DES or RSA; we're looking at quantum cryptography and the like.

      One of the next advances would be in computer security. Now, while security is not a destination, but a journey, a lot more thought is being put into the security of devices today, especially in a military/government context, than was being put forth ten years ago, or even five years ago. This is especially true in the world of embedded systems, which is being cooperatively worked on by computer scientists and electrical engineers.

      You say that the architecture of today is the same as in the 1970s, well I would have to disagree. Today's embedded systems are new beasts, and have a very clever design. They have found their way into applications no one would have considered in the beginning of their development. You can find embedded systems revolutionizing everything, even the pacemaker.

      Now, all of that said, I want to correct some misstatements mentioned earlier in the comments. First of all, DARPA d.n.e. "the Government." The military and government are actually two different animals that are sort of shoved together. Because funding in one is being cut by ONE entity does not mean that funding is being cut in all areas. In fact, many of the three-letter-agencies have received huge amounts of money to recruit college graduates into the computing/information assurance fields. Since 9/11 (sadly) it had meant big business for the CS-based information assurance groups. These agencies have given millions and millions of dollars a year to colleges for almost unrestricted research purposes, encouraging creative, young minds to contribute to a field that was, until recently, stagnating in the .gov world. Many of these people, who are paid from the CS end, are gun-carrying agents, versed in electronic warfare, work in digital forensics, are language analysts with CS backgrounds, work in embedded systems or small electronics (essentially the James Bondesque Q-section), develop new, non-public and public encryption techniques, work in Signals intelligence, etc.

      You might also consider that people being paid through the government computer science sections aren't necessarily even completely working as straight computer scientists. They usually work in addition to. Some of them are CS/linguists who bring their knowledge of uncommon languages to the world of cryptography, developing language-based frequency analysis for cryptanalysis. Some of them are more electrical based, bringing RFID applications and biometric systems to computer platforms. In fact, in the government I would say that people with a CS-bent are expected to be some of the most outgoing, flexible people, given the trend of the last few years. They probably work the widest variety of jobs in addition to being expected to be able to do the traditional programming work. Oftentimes, those paid through the Computer Science sections are expected to have engineering degrees or backgrounds as well, and sometimes foreign languages, business classes, foreign policy. You don't f

    32. Re:Should I be worried? by exa · · Score: 1

      Sure. Everything is already finished with computers.

      --
      --exa--
    33. Re:Should I be worried? by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

      So, what fundamental advances are currently being worked on? What are we funding now that we should see 20 years down the road?

      That is what the grandparent is asking. Personally, agree w/ him -- we haven't had any *fundamental* advances in quite a while; after all, what fundamental advances were developed 20-25 years ago that we've seen released within the last 5 years?

      This has been IT's problem since the dot-com boom gave out -- there's little in the way of fundamentals to build on that haven't already been built-upon. We may be applying technology to coincide with social changes -- e.g. distributed computing and P2P apps taking advantage of the fact that an ever-increasing number of people own computers (particularly as the price of computing has dropped so low due to economies-of-scale that nearly anybody can afford at least 1 box) -- but show me a fundamental *technology*, absent any social trends, that is completely new. (heck, P2P isn't new, and various CS profs (rightly) argued as much in the recent MGM v. Grokster USSC case)

      I'm waiting, and so is the entire American IT industry.

    34. Re:Should I be worried? by timeOday · · Score: 1
      So, what fundamental advances are currently being worked on? What are we funding now that we should see 20 years down the road?
      Don't you get it? Something isn't "fundamental" until it turns out to be useful down the road. Even the basic tenets of information theory were at first just formalisms of what people were figuring out about telegraphy. If we all knew exactly what would turn out to be useful, there wouldn't be any such thing as "research," it would all be "development."
    35. Re:Should I be worried? by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

      Again, to restate my question: what research are we funding now which we may or may not see in practical use 20 years from now?

      I'll give you a much-hated example: DARPA's Total Information Awareness. Neat concept (but we know its end-use, and we don't like it at all).

      I occasionally peruse my university's copies of the various ACM publications it receives. I can't recall seeing anything particularly Earth-shattering in those either (the occasional data-mining technique aside), but then, I'm probably not creative/clever enough...

    36. Re:Should I be worried? by Dire+Bonobo · · Score: 3, Interesting
      That you have no idea what you're talking about does not appear to have dissuaded you from doing so:


      >>> - breakthroughs in graphics
      >
      >All designed in the 60's through 80's, but lacking in powerful enough hardware until the late 90's.

      Total nonsense. Most of the recent advances---such as fluid sims, deformable objects, motion capture, and the like---were made possible because of better algorithms---i.e., research---rather than any advance in hardware. I can guarantee you running algorithms from the 60's-80's on modern hardware wouldn't give you the kinds of results the multi-billion-dollar entertainment industries are looking for.


      >>> - breakthroughs in vision
      >
      > ???

      Did you get mail today? How do you think it got sorted? Computer vision algorithms started doing that in the last two decades.

      Most uses of vision in industry are pretty low-profile---things like automatic verification of manufactured component quality---but are neither trivial nor ancient.


      >>> - stunning advancements in computer architecture
      >
      >Eh? What stunning advancements? Most of the architectures in
      > use today go all the way back to the early 70's.

      You'd be a fool to think that a P4 is 70's technology just because an 8086 was designed a long time ago. Building a computer with modern lithography and 70's-era designs would be a laughable failure; caching, for example, has improved hugely since then, with significant work on parallelizing the multi-stage decoding, fetching, and execution of individual instructions with extensive branch prediction and speculative prefetching.



      Part of the problem is, earth-shaking discoveries don't spring fully-formed from a computer scientist's brow. Each one is built up over years of painstaking work, carefully laying the groundwork necessary to get there.

      That's the reason you can point to much earlier precursors of "recent" advances, and also the reason you can't point to truly recent ones---the research that's being done right now is too abstract and specialized for you to know about it, and by the time it's something that you'd have heard of, it's probably no longer new.


      Essentially, your complaint is "why haven't I heard of all the new advances at the cutting edge of computer science???" My response is "why should we go out of our way to tell you what we're working on if you can't be bothered to look for yourself?"

      You haven't heard because you haven't looked hard enough. The only one to blame for that is you.

    37. Re:Should I be worried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll name a couple

      Parameterised complexity (Algorithms)
      Kernal methods for machine intellligence like SVMS
      Datamining algorthims in bioninformatics are one of the driving forces behind genetic research.

    38. Re:Should I be worried? by drsquare · · Score: 1

      I know this is Slashdot, home of the braindead fanboy, but I wouldn't call Google a great CS innovation. It's a search engine. We already have those; making it slightly better and giving it a cleaner interface doesn't justify massive government funding. I'm afraid I don't konw what Akamai is. The web is 16 years old, it's yesterday's news.

      These days, we're not getting out of CS what we put in, i.e we fund it but get little back, and when we do get something it's encumbered by DRM or advertising or other shady commercial practices.

      If you want more CS research, you need more innovations. When will we see the next Internet, or MP3, or word processor. When will we see a new development which revolutionises computer use, which makes people who have no interest in computers want to buy a computer?

    39. Re:Should I be worried? by drsquare · · Score: 1

      So you're saying to the goverment: "Give us millions of dollars, and you might see some nice new technologies in twenty years." ?

      Most of the people in charge of giving this funding won't be in the goverment in 20 years, you're going to have a hard time convincing them to give funding to something just so that their successors in twenty years can get the credit.

    40. Re:Should I be worried? by drsquare · · Score: 1

      OK, I'm a computer-illiterate government person, and you're coming to me asking for more funding. I don't know what RAM is, let alone full abstraction results for proof-carrying zero knowledge logic. Explain to me what any of that actually means, what it would lead to in real-world results, and why I should care that it's developed?

    41. Re:Should I be worried? by ch_music · · Score: 1

      Who saw Einstein coming?

  13. What is the meaning of this outrage? by __aagujc9792 · · Score: 0

    The relationship between the wizard and the exchequer has always been a difficult one, and grant writing has become a high art, giving us such concepts as the Philospher's Stone, the Fountain of Youth, Human-Capable AI, Automated Intelligence Assessment, and more.

    But the meaning of "outrage" in this context is not so much that outraged researchers have no answer to the question "what am I paying you for, anyway?" as that they don't understand the question anymore.

    "Huh? Stop wasting my time! I've got a career to build here!"

    What we have here is a failure to communicate.

    --
    OP

  14. What a "great" news... by EntrancedX · · Score: 0

    Where are we heading in today's world? Building weapons seems more important than improving our lives through research in CS and other non-violent areas. It makes no sense! Maybe a "hax0r-attack" from China will change their minds... Gah!

  15. it was an odd arrangement by Trepidity · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Basic CS research ought to be funded, IMO, but there's no reason completely open-ended CS research should be funded by DARPA---that's what the National Science Foundation is for.

    Of course, this cut in DARPA funding is unlikely to be matched by a commensurate increase in NSF funding, which is the real problem...

    1. Re:it was an odd arrangement by convolvatron · · Score: 1

      yes. exactly. the real problem is the state of basic research and funding.

      having darpa, onr, doe, and that whole crew fund research has always warped things. while it did mean that more money was going into cs, the military spin and the very loose kind of peer review resulted in alot of that money going to stupid things. and most of the good basic work had to be disguised by putting pictures of tanks and helicopters on slides and using the word 'warfighter' alot.

    2. Re:it was an odd arrangement by wodgy7 · · Score: 4, Informative
      You're right, fundamental CS research would be funded by the NSF, in an ideal world.

      The problem is that things haven't worked that way in the real world, not for a long time. Since the late '70s there has been an assumption that DARPA will fund the bulk of CS fundamental research. Partly because of that, is has historically been *very* difficult to get a grant approved by the NSF for CS research unless it's very targeted towards the pure end of the research spectrum. Computer architecture (except very low-level engineering), graphics, human-computer interaction, even databases, etc. are all fields that the NSF has been reluctant to fund because by their nature, even the basic research has an "applied" component.

      Without an increase in NSF funding, the DARPA cuts are going to devastate many areas of CS research. It's really disheartening.

    3. Re:it was an odd arrangement by Coryoth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Basic CS research ought to be funded, IMO, but there's no reason completely open-ended CS research should be funded by DARPA---that's what the National Science Foundation is for.

      Let's be frank, there are certain things in basic long term CS research that DARPA is going to be a lot more interested in than the NSF. It makes sense for DARPA, then, to bother to make sure that research is getting done. The best way to make sure that research is getting done is to pay for it.

      What sort of research should DARPA be interested in? Anything related to software security and assurance is going to be of more interest to DARPA than the general public (yes the general public is interested, but they aren't quite as motivated as DARPA). There's plenty you can do in that field, from new security architectures in the OS (like, for instance, what the NSA did with SELinux etc.), through to new protocols, better fault tolerance, intrusion detection etc. Having your military computer networks secure is just good practice. You should be interested in being at the cutting edge of of that. If you want a nice list of things DARPA could be doing, along with a reccomendation that more money ought to be invested in long term research at DARPA, you could try this report to the President from a month ago by the President's Information Technology Advisory Committee.

      Jedidiah.

      Jedidiah.

    4. Re:it was an odd arrangement by Forbman · · Score: 1

      Funny, I was just reading an article the other day that the funding for the supercomputing centers (SDSC, NCSA, etc) by the NSF was going to be up in the air in a couple of years...

  16. This Makes Sense by TheFlyingGoat · · Score: 2, Insightful

    While it sucks for the CS people in the Pentagon, it just makes sense right now to divert money to things that will benefit the troops in Afganistan and Iraq. I'm sure that some of the CS projects help soliders on the ground, but as we know, 95% of IT projects aren't completed on time. So why not deliver better weapons, vehicles, body armor, and other technology that has the capability of saving lives right now.

    Once we're completely out of Iraq and Afganistan, hopefully they'll put the money back into long term research.

    --
    You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life. --Winston Churchill
    1. Re:This Makes Sense by notque · · Score: 1

      While it sucks for the CS people in the Pentagon, it just makes sense right now to divert money to things that will benefit the troops in Afganistan and Iraq. I'm sure that some of the CS projects help soliders on the ground, but as we know, 95% of IT projects aren't completed on time. So why not deliver better weapons, vehicles, body armor, and other technology that has the capability of saving lives right now.

      Once we're completely out of Iraq and Afganistan, hopefully they'll put the money back into long term research.


      Wouldn't that have made sense before the war, not years into it?

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    2. Re:This Makes Sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      95% of IT projects

      Um, 100% of DARPA projects are completed on time. That's part of the requirement for DARPA: finish you fscking report, or be blackballed for life.

      The 95% failure rate you cited is for companies. And guess where the money is going? From schools, which have a nearly 100% perfect performance, to defense contractors.

      Now, in your experience, how good are the defense contractors at keeping budgets and production schedules?

    3. Re:This Makes Sense by TheBlacklion · · Score: 1

      Well the deal is that we have not had to engage in such widespread urban conflict before. Realizing we need more armored Humvees makes sense now, but then hindsight is 20/20.

    4. Re:This Makes Sense by ocularDeathRay · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Once we're completely out of Iraq and Afganistan, hopefully they'll put the money back into long term research.

      yeah. good point. I'll start holding my breath now........

      /me passes out while clicking submit

      --
      Obama is a twitter sock puppet
    5. Re:This Makes Sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, there's an easy way to "support" your troops: stop the murdering and get them out asap.
      OTOH, the more of them die the more the genepool is cleaned from useless crap.

    6. Re:This Makes Sense by notque · · Score: 1

      Well the deal is that we have not had to engage in such widespread urban conflict before. Realizing we need more armored Humvees makes sense now, but then hindsight is 20/20.

      Tommy Franks thought we needed more armored Humvees. That isn't hindsight at all, he thought it then and was shut down.

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    7. Re:This Makes Sense by be-fan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, because defense contractors are known for being punctual.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    8. Re:This Makes Sense by localman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You're relatively new to this world, right? :)

      We can put a pile of high-tech weapons and defense systems in the hands of our troops. It won't make a spit of difference. The issues there are political and social. Decades of killing hasn't made any progress at all. I just gets worse. If we kill people more efficiently that's not very likely to change.

      Why do you think there are so many countries that have been terrorized for decadees? Lack of good enough weapons? I would tend to think it runs deeper than that.

      This is different from a regular war where you've got a leader of a cohesive nation invading other nations. In that case you can "win". This stuff is based on centuries of internal religious conflict amont the people themselves. It's unlikely we'll make a high enough percentage of the people there happy in the near future.

      Ah well. Let's just nuke the whole area and let God sort them out. Because weapons will help. Right?

      Cheers.

    9. Re:This Makes Sense by TheBlacklion · · Score: 1

      And no one questions that we need them now. Thank you for prooving my point.

    10. Re:This Makes Sense by notque · · Score: 1

      And no one questions that we need them now. Thank you for prooving my point.

      And no one questioned we needed them then.

      Anytime.

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    11. Re:This Makes Sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't that have made sense before the war, not years into it?

      Don't worry, this conflict has many years to go yet.

    12. Re:This Makes Sense by Frumious+Wombat · · Score: 1

      During the mid-90s, we heard every year, "we're bringing the troops home from Kosovo next year". Technically, this was true, but they forgot to add, "we're sending a new batch over at the same time." We're still there, with no signs we're ever leaving.

      We're going to be in Afghanistan/Iraq (what are their domain addresses anyway?), for years to decades. That's the point of an open-ended war on a concept; you can use it as a justification for refusing to fund anything you don't understand.

      Pesky Scientists. If you give them money, they'll just make fusion work (and put Texas out of business), fly to the heavens (and disprove my Iron-age mythology), or invent an AI that understands subject/verb agreement and can pronounce, "nuclear".

      --
      the more accurate the calculations became, the more the concepts tended to vanish into thin air. R. S. Mulliken
    13. Re:This Makes Sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This makes no sense. When the funding for basic research is descreased, research avenues are interrupted, and never restarted. More tragically, scores of people never get to do a PhD, scores of young PhD's never get research positions not academic jobs, and leave research altogether. That expertise is lost forever. The money that was invested in training these people up to this point is wasted. A healthy research community strives on the stability of the funding sources.

    14. Re:This Makes Sense by tom's+a-cold · · Score: 1
      hile it sucks for the CS people in the Pentagon, it just makes sense right now to divert money to things that will benefit the troops in Afganistan and Iraq.
      You are of course referring to one-way tickets home, right?

      --
      Get your teeth into a small slice: the cake of liberty
    15. Re:This Makes Sense by notque · · Score: 1

      I just wanted to say, I agree. :)

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    16. Re:This Makes Sense by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 1

      The only way we can help the troops in Iraq at this point has nothing to do with science but a lot to do with politics -- i.e. just force the politicians to send them home. As far as DARPA helping the troops, the few DARPA research projects I have heard about do not sound very pleasant for the trrops. For example they are doing research into keeping people awake for several days that involves putting electrodes in their brains and administering shocks to specific brain areas. Well if I were in the military I would really hope this particular research project does not succeed.

    17. Re:This Makes Sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I heard someone doing a talk about about the defense/CS research community, and one of the major successes they cited was the Blue Force Tracker system, which was rushed into service for Bush's war. Relatively simple ideas (which I have a sneaking suspicion were inspired by some RTS fan grad student), yet they proved highly beneficial in reducing FF incidents and coordinating troop movements. Talk about your immediate paybacks!

    18. Re:This Makes Sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once we're completely out of Iraq and Afganistan, hopefully they'll put the money back into long term research.

      ------------------

      Nope ... won't happen until we are out of Iran, Syria, Yemen, Bali, Malaysia, Portugal, Uruguay and Sierra Leone ... at the earliest.

  17. google suggest by dextroz · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Completely off topic post... I am trying to find out - how common does a search term/phrase/expression (in numbers) need to be before google starts spitting it out in Google Suggest? I've looked all over but haven't found any concrete figures or official data. Thanks!

    --
    Where's my free iPod!? Until then, I'll settle for a kiss...
  18. Pentagon Spending on Weapons to Soar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative



    Report Says Pentagon Spending on Weapons to Soar
    By TIM WEINER

    Published: April 1, 2005

    A new report by the Government Accountability Office warned yesterday that the costs of the Pentagon's arsenal could soar by hundreds of billions of dollars over the next decade.

    The Pentagon has said it is building more than 70 major weapons systems at a cost of at least $1.3 trillion. But the Pentagon generally understates the time and money spent on weapons programs by 20 to 50 percent, the new report said.

    A survey of 26 major weapons systems showed cost overruns of $42.7 billion, or 41.9 percent, in their research and development phase.

    Last year, the overall projected cost for those same 26 systems rose $68.6 billion, or 14.3 percent, to $548.9 billion, from $480.3 billion in the last 12 months.

    A wider assessment of 54 major weapons systems showed that a majority are costing more and taking longer to develop than planned.

    While Defense Department officials questioned details of some assessments of the major weapons systems, they did not dispute the report's overall conclusions.

    The Government Accountability Office, the nonpartisan budget watchdog for Congress, singled out several programs.

    The research and development costs for the Army's Future Combat Systems, a program to build 18 sets of networked weapons and military robots for 15 combat brigades, have increased 51 percent in the last year, the report said. Army officials say the program could cost as much as $145 billion, or $53 billion more than first advertised.

    The Joint Strike Fighter program, which is supposed to build 2,458 planes for the Air Force, the Navy, the Marine Corps and American allies, will cost $244.8 billion, or about $99.6 million for each aircraft, the accountability office reported this month. Four years ago, the program was supposed to cost $183.6 billion for 2,866 planes, or about $64 million for each.

    The F-22 fighter jet program will cost $63.8 billion for 178 aircraft, or more than $356 million a plane, the office reported earlier this month. Twenty years ago, when the program began, the Air Force planned to buy about 760 F-22's at $35 million each.

    A set of five surveillance satellites, called the Space-Based Infrared System-High, will cost $9.9 billion, not $3.9 billion as originally planned eight years ago, an increase of $1.2 billion a satellite, according to the new report.

    The report also pointed to a Navy missile called the Extended Range Guided Munition. The program began seven years ago. Still in the test phase, it has cost $598.4 million. Seven years ago, it was supposed to produce thousands of weapons at a cost of $45,000 each. Today the price per missile is estimated at $191,000.

    The watchdog agency, in scores of reports produced since the end of the cold war, has consistently explained why so many weapons cost so much more than promised.

    "Performance shortfalls, schedule delays and cost increases," the office has said, are "the logical consequences" of the weapons-buying culture.

    Congress and the Pentagon "create incentives for pushing programs and encouraging undue optimism, parochialism and other compromises of good judgment," according to the office. In that culture, "persistent performance problems, cost growth, schedule slippage," and other failures "cannot all be attributed to errors, lack of expertise or unforeseeable events."

    They are instead "embedded as the undesirable, but apparently acceptable, consequence of the process," the office has said. "These problems persist not because they are overlooked or underregulated, but because they enable more programs to survive and thus more needs to be met."

    David A. Walker, the comptroller general of the United States, who oversees the accountability office, told Congress in testimony submitted with the report yesterday that that the traditional "buy it before you try it" practices that have pervaded the weapons-buying culture ar

    1. Re:Pentagon Spending on Weapons to Soar by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

      The overbudgettyness was because they were forced to build DRM into everything.

      (no, im not serious)

    2. Re:Pentagon Spending on Weapons to Soar by Agarax · · Score: 0

      As much as i love to bash the brass hats at the pentagon, the argument is flawed.

      The whole 'per plane' argument in particular fails because the cost per-plane drops drastically when you increase the numbers that you order

      Its all in the economy of size.

      --
      Remember folks, slashdot doesn't have a -1 "disagree" moderation!
  19. Twilight of the empire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So the gist is that DARPA wants to fund companies, and not universities. And when they do fund .edus, they have outrageous restrictions, like requiring all help on a project be US citizens.

    As a CS students, I can tell you: finding hack US coders is easy; find qualified US students who can do research is hard. It's like they don't teach math or science in US schools anymore or something. Kids from Greece or China or wherever come over here, and run circles around US students in formal predicate logic, discrete math, and other subjects that Ken and Barbie found too hard. It's no exaggeration to say that over 70% of all research students are foreign--simply because there are not many qualified US students. (It's a different story if we needed literature or communication students--we've got tons of those.)

    America is a country where companies don't make anything anymore. Instead, they just own the IP, and outsource the *production* to China/Taiwan/India. Hell, look at Transmeta, also in /. news today: they are switching to a pure IP model. Exactly what makes use sure that this model is sane for a country? Production capacity is not very mobile, but intellectual talent does not have to stay put in the US. The engineers who invent the IP can just as easily be located (and will soon be born, educated, and working entirely) overseas.

    US Companies went through a similar cylce of eating-the-seed corn in the 80s. What happened was they got their asses handed to them by Japan, where R&D was focused on basic science, and not the "short term" deliverables. Now, it seems DARPA is going to try to repeat the same experiment in failure.

    Don't get me wrong. This is not the last straw for the US R&D system, but merely one more straw in what has to be the last bundle. It's twilight of the empire, folks. If you're young, start learning another language.

    A far better solution is to let all students in US institutions work on projects. (If a project is truly classified, then just use one of the many defense contractors.) When foreign students graduate, most of them (not all) want to become US citizens. What better way to recruit new talented citizens for a country? With the *reeeediculous* DARPA restrictions, many of the foreign students I know are going home. They expect (rightly) that in 10-15 years, their countries will dominate in the industries they've trained for.

    1. Re:Twilight of the empire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What happened was they got their asses handed to them by Japan, where R&D was focused on basic science, and not the "short term" deliverables.

      Whose economy is better now than in the mid 80's?

    2. Re:Twilight of the empire by mzwaterski · · Score: 1

      The sky is falling!

    3. Re:Twilight of the empire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Well, the Japanese are better off in many ways.
      Or do you define 50% of your loans held by
      Chinese banks an American success story.
      Dude, we're in TRILLIONS of dollars of debt,
      the boomers are about to bankrupt the rest of
      the budgets.

      Japan's got a few problems with banking. We've
      got systemic failures.

      I suppose you can look at the numbers today,
      and say the US is better off. But the US
      is better off because the government borrowed
      trillions of dollars and pumped it into the
      economy. If the Japanese did the same, they'd
      look great today as well. But in 10-15 years,
      when those bonds come due... look out.

    4. Re:Twilight of the empire by PhatboySlim · · Score: 1

      The country someone was born in has nothing to do with their capacity for learning. If your claim that U.S. students are not as motivated or interested in R&D work due to our society then I agree with you, but to classify an entire nation into a group of lesser intelligent species I would have to assume you have no idea what you are talking about. Thomas Edison and Benjamin Franklin would not have circles run around them by anyone, and I'm sure if they were able to read your post they would simply quiver that the thought you yourself were a CS student. You're broad generalizations leave me wondering how naive you actually are, american or not.

      --
      Be sure to remember the Programmers Prayer
    5. Re:Twilight of the empire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Although contrary to the /. criticism, in a lot of ways I think that this decision is the correct move by DARPA. I think this is a good decision for multiple reasons:

      First, DARPA has offered to the money to the universities and it is the universities that have declined it. Employing US citizens shouldn't be a big deal, however many of the graduate schools actively discriminate against US citizens in preference for what they view as imported slave labor. This was definitely the case at the graduate school where I recently got my masters in CS. They made it a total pain in the butt for me to get in because I wasn't viewed as slave labor. Yet some of my Indian friends had no trouble at all. It was pretty telling that the bottom of the students were mainly forign nationals and the US students ranked from the middle to the top. The elite graduate schools get even more applicants and can be even choosier, yet they still don't want to bother employing US citizens. Last time I looked at the graduate admissions for MIT's EECS department, the ratio of applied to accepted was greater than ten to one. With that kind of selection, there is no excuse for complaining about a lack of US students. Hence the problem is really that the universities don't want to play ball with DARPA, rather than DARPA being unreasonable.

      Second, the universities aren't the bargan for research that they used to be. What has happened is that the university administration has gotten in on the deal big time. A long time ago it used to be that the grants provided the stipends and a portion for overhead. Now the grants also have to pay for the tuition waver and pay huge overhead costs to support a bloated administration. Parts of the MIT fauculty are well aware of the huge expansion of administration. At the school I went to graduate school at, I could track the massive expansion of administration from the budget reports for the last fourty years. The transition to increasing overhead costs was something that I saw first hand during the time I was there. Professors noted the problem that their grants wouldn't go as far and that they would be less competetive dollar wise for new grants, but the administration did it anyways. I don't propose that defense contractors are great with money, only that the universities are no longer a bargin.

      Let me give a somewhat hypothetical illustration of how this has happened. During the slightly longer than two years I was in graduate school, the administration changed the formulas for overhead and forced the larger grants to pay part of the tuition. Assume I had a $4000/quarter stipend. After the administration deducted all of the fees (which increased at 14+ percent/yr), I would get something like $750/month before paying for health insurance. Now how much would the grant have to be for in order to pay me $750/month? A long time ago with lower overhead and fees, it might have only have been for $1200/mn. Now a days, it is something like $1333 * (1.0/0.40) + $600, which is almost $4k/mn.

      Third, from reading a lot of the CS literature in my speciality area, I feel that a lot of the research that is done in the universities is crap. I'm all for long term research, but much of what the universities are doing isn't even advancing the short term knowledge, much less making a long term impact. DARPA is probably trying to partially address this problem.

      Much of the problem is that "Most American companies have largely ended basic research and have begun to outsource product research and development extensively even as investments in Asia and Europe are rising quickly." As big as DARPA is, this trend is far more important that the redirection of $100 Million in DARPA money.

      In sum, the universities are reaping what they have sown. If they don't want to do the research for DARPA, then DARPA is right to find someone who will.

    6. Re:Twilight of the empire by lsmeg · · Score: 4, Funny
      It's no exaggeration to say that over 70% of all research students are foreign--simply because there are not many qualified US students. (It's a different story if we needed literature or communication students--we've got tons of those.)

      Id say were loosing on that front 2

      --
      It's OK! I'm a limo driver!
    7. Re:Twilight of the empire by KtHM · · Score: 1

      The problem is not necessarily the innate ability of the people (though based on those I know, it might be), it's our educational system.

      American public schools suck. Badly. I recall reading somewhere that we are 16th out of 19 countries polled in math and science - just above Brazil and North Korea.

      There are students who rise above our broken schools and manage to do extremely well in math/science, but the majority of people learn what they're taught and that's it.

    8. Re:Twilight of the empire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I agree with your main point, but it is not my experience that universities discriminate against US nationals.
      • Last time I looked at the graduate admissions for MIT's EECS department, the ratio of applied to accepted was greater than ten to one. With that kind of selection, there is no excuse for complaining about a lack of US students.
      I suggest that in fact these departments select based on aptitude, not nationality. The world is large, so it should not be surprising that in world-class institutions the nationality of the students reflects the world at large instead of just the country the university happens to be located in.
    9. Re:Twilight of the empire by maxjenius22 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The fact that 70% of CS researchers in the U.S. are not from the U.S. says nothing about our schools. It merely reflects the fact that >70% of the people in the world are not from the U.S., but they all want to go to the best schools, which are all in the U.S..

    10. Re:Twilight of the empire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You see, this is exactly the type of shit I'm complaining about. You accuse me of saying that all Americans are dumb, lazy, etc., and then take me to task for the imagined offense. This is an excellent rhetorical strategy (called a "straw man" argument, if I'm not mistaken). But it's completely false.

      Your imagined complaint is quite representative of an education rich in language, debate, and critical thinking. And you're not alone in that skill. Just about every American student I've met can put words into an opponent's mouth, and then criticize them for being too much of a generalist.

      But now let me ask you something. Do you have the same finese you display in language, say, ... with calculating Markovian potentials in an undirect junction graph? No? Well, here's another generalization for you (on that I belive is true based on experience): every foreign student I've met can do this complex statistical operation, and some have taken more than one course on it. I've *never* met an American student who had training in this before coming to college. They all take a remedial class or join a study group with a smart Greek, Indian, Paki, or Chinese student.

      My point was not that Americans are somehow an inferior species. My point is that the educational system in the US does not produce good CS researchers , at least when compared to the foreign undergrad and masters students. And that's why so many grad student CS researchers are foreign.

      You're broad generalizations leave me wondering how naive you actually are, american or not.

      Tit-for-tat: your gross distortion of my post leaves me no doubt that you're just a troll. Your ranking so far confirms this.

      Now, if rhetoric, straw-man arguments, and other language skills are in need, I have no hesitation: I'll get someone trained in the US. But if math, stats, logic are needed, the numbers speak for themselves: the most qualified applicants are overwhelmingly foreign. That was my point, and your suggestion that I've made some sort of genetic slur against Americans is not convincing--not even, I'd imagine, to an American poorly versed in the sciences.

    11. Re:Twilight of the empire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or they recognise that there's a lot of money, and an even larger amount of semi-educated people in the US begging to be parted from it.
      /Dual citizenship //Moving back home when the blue-blooded gravy train dries up.

    12. Re:Twilight of the empire by dabigpaybackski · · Score: 1
      For the sordid background on the American youth indoctrination centers, aka "schools," click the URL under my nick. The author has kindly made his book, The Underground History of American Education, available to read online. To say that it's an eye-opener is a pathetic understatement.

      Enjoy, and don't blame me if reading it makes you angry.

      --
      "OH SHIT, THERE'S A HORSE IN THE HOSPITAL!"
    13. Re:Twilight of the empire by Scott7477 · · Score: 1

      Not true!
      Here's why:
      The pace of innovation in computer science in the private sector, by which I mean both for profit and open source firms, is racing ahead at a faster pace than at any time in history. The US is gaining more from this than any other country. I can see why DARPA would say that they don't need to fund as much CS as in the past because they can observe what's happening in the open source community and cherry pick ideas that they think the US military can use.
      I find it strange that /. posters would complain about cuts in any sector of the US defense establishment, as the prevailing view here is that the US military is evil. I guess it just goes to show that computer people are just like everybody else; its ok to cut government spending as long is its not our funding.
      With respect to the quality of US CS students, I would say that it is just as good as that of any other country. It is just that the criteria used to select students allowed into PHD programs is fairly arbitrary. The difference of a few points on the IIT entrance exam may decide whether a US graduate program takes a US citizen or an Indian student. Foreign grads generally pay full price for their doctorates, while home grown grads are generally subsidized, so schools have a financial incentive to favor foreign grad students.
      Also, the quality of teaching in math and CS at the undergraduate level in US universities is abominable. Basically, you have to already know the answers or be able to learn without help. There are several reasons for this. One is that professors are hired for their ability to produce research rather than their teaching skills. Inevitably, many are lousy teachers. In addition, TA's do a significant amount of teaching and tutoring, many of whom know English as a second language. So unless you have the aptitude of Einstein or Feynman for this subject, your chances of being taught well are pretty low.
      Finally, I think it is comical that anyone in electronics or computer science would complain about the US military. The majority of advances in this field have been due to military funding to
      construct the US military as we now know it. From ICBM's to advanced radar to integrated circuits, all were funded to increase the capability of the US military. Now the whole world is benefiting.

      --
      "Lack of technical competence coupled with the arrogance of power, as usual, leads to no good end."
    14. Re:Twilight of the empire by salesgeek · · Score: 2, Interesting

      America is a country where companies don't make anything anymore.

      Agriculture, entertainment and industry account for a huge chunk of the US economy.

      It's twilight of the empire, folks. If you're young, start learning another language.

      Half empty, eh?

      --
      -- $G
    15. Re:Twilight of the empire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of all of my points, this one is probably most specific to the particular school and department. At the unversity where I studied math as an undergrad, the graduate students did seem to reflect the world at large as they took both those most able to do research and some who were able to do both OK research and teach well. At the university where I studied CS in graduate school, it was over 80 percent international students. I had first rate grades and probably the highest GRE of the applicants, yet was only provisionally admitted and had to find funding once I got there.

      Interestingly, MIT's EECS department takes a remarkably high percentage of US students compared with the remainder of the US research insitutions. Part of this is to staff MIT Lincoln Labs, which supports something like 700 EECS students. Lincoln Labs does classified research mainly for the DOD.

    16. Re:Twilight of the empire by pilkul · · Score: 1
      Bah, you seem to think you are revealing a great secret. Hardly anybody has much respect for public elementary/secondary schools. They teach basic literacy and numeracy, and for that reason they are valuable to society, but in general that's about it.

      America's is not worse than any other school system I've seen though. And it's silly to call them "indoctrination", since most people's beliefs and attitudes are determined far more by friends and family than schooling.

    17. Re:Twilight of the empire by Dire+Bonobo · · Score: 1
      > Employing US citizens shouldn't be a big deal, however many of the graduate schools actively discriminate against US citizens

      And thus I know you have no clue what you're talking about.

      My department just went through the yearly prospective student search. We were all keen to get qualified US applicants. We got some, of course, but---as usual---most of the applicants were foreign citizens. Accordingly, since we want the best students, half or so are not US citizens.

      That's hardly unfair discrimination against US students. Unless you somehow believe that US universities should only admit US citizens. Which, in addition to being truly discriminatory, would be a great way to shoot the US's technological supremacy in the foot, and with it the US economy.


      Moreover, US citizens are---while grad students---just as much indentured servants as foreigners are. Other than being unable to receive certain funds from the US government, there is effectively no difference between US and non-US students. Any complaints to the contrary sound an awful lot like sour grapes.

    18. Re:Twilight of the empire by Forbman · · Score: 1

      Agriculture, entertainment and industry account for a huge chunk of the US

      Depends. Just ask a sheep rancher. Bolliwood (sp) makes 10x more movies per year than Holliwood, and reaches more people (OK, most of them are in India).

      Niche markets survive in the US (mini-mill steel vs. Big Iron), but there is heavy pressure to send scrap steel to China, which is then sold back in the US cheaper than US producers can make.

      Other countries will kick US' ass in basic ag commodity production, because they don't have the labor costs or environmental restrictions.

      I like the environmental restrictions, because I see them as a form of mandated efficiency for the whole economy, not for the farmer. Fewer chemical bad effects 5-20 years down the line more than offsetting any short-term gains), but I think it would also be fair for the US to insist that imported commodities meet the same standards.

      Hey, if Japan can get away with the same line of reasoning against US imports...

      Yes, half empty. Unless you're a lawyer.

    19. Re:Twilight of the empire by Forbman · · Score: 1

      People live up to, or down to, the expectations placed on them.

      In the US, I would say we're doing a good job of making sure people live down to them...

      People bitch about "new textbooks" for static subjects like mathematics and basic science, english comprehension and vocabulary, etc.

      Others worry that w/o computers in school, their kids won't be able to find jobs when they graduate because they don't know how to use computers.

      Having experienced working with older "non-traditional" college students (Univ. of Washington, Bothell, 1991-1994) in a computer lab, most people figure it out soon enough. Solitaire and Mindsweeper are the two main aptitude applications one must master, and "using the computer" is 80% done.

      95% of computer users do not use styles or templates. about 20% of them (young and old) would manually try to paginate their papers, and be baffled when the hard page formatting for their home printers was completely fucked up when they printed out at school.

      My kids (6 and 4 yrs old) need to know how to program computers? Not really. I hope that they learn algebra and basic calculus, as well as have a good hand at mental arithmetic, just so that they can think symbolically and abstractly. I also hope that they end up liking to read.

      But if they can use Windows, er, a "computer"? Please. They will learn that by osmosis.

      Thomas Edison and Benjamin Franklin would not have circles run around them by anyone, and I'm sure if they were able to read your post they would simply quiver that the thought you yourself were a CS student

      No, they'd be ROFLAOUTV (rolling on floor, laughing asses off until they vomit).

    20. Re:Twilight of the empire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      >American public schools suck. Badly. I recall reading somewhere that we are 16th out of 19 countries polled in math and science - just above Brazil >and North Korea.

      Although I applaud your interest in matters of education policy, I would advise you to reconsider the logical soundness of the statistic you cite (which I presume is a reference to the TIMSS achievement test).

      Do yourself a favor and perform a google search on 'TIMSS criticisms' and decide on your own if such an apples-to-oranges comparison is really a useful measure of educational achievement.

      And assuming you have an open mind and you're not just another private school propagandist making the rounds on ./, let it be known that I can assure you that, as someone who has graduated from both public and private educational institutions, there is no funding source/quality correlation in an educational environment. It is usually more a function of funding level and, more directly, socioeconomic factors that determine an individual student's success (and, by extension, the institution's success).

  20. Fighting the last war by Quinn_Inuit · · Score: 2, Interesting
    True to form, our military is preparing to fight the last war. In 2014, we'll probably be hearing about brigades getting lost or forgotten about, blue on blue airstrikes meant for ground support, and other results of a massive attack on military information networks conducted by cells from around the world.

    On the plus side, by the time we fight the Mongolian Khanate in 2037 we'll have the best network firewalls in the world. :)

    --

    Stop learning! Only you can prevent esoterrorism.
    1. Re:Fighting the last war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While think tanks love to talk about how transformative information technology is, if you get down into the field, I think you'll find that your typical military grunt isn't going to trust his fancy high tech toys more than he needs to. Basic training concentrates on learning how to fight the old fashioned way, ranging from fisticuffs to knives to riflery, rather than on delivering 2000 pound bombs using GPS-guided bombs and laser rangefinders. Not to say that we aren't becoming more heavily reliant on technology, but if, say, GPS jammers were used to disable precision strikes, we can always fall back to laser-guided bombs or even saturation strikes. There's almost always a fallback capability, to an almost ridiculous degree, in many respects. Everyone knows fully well that you'll never get to use a bayonet in combat, but every footsoldier is still trained in how to use one.

  21. They'll also make a slight name change by jc42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... in favor of projects that will yield short-term military results.

    If they can predict beforehand what a project will yield, then it's not research; it's engineering. So they should change their name from DARPA to DAPA.

    --
    Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    1. Re:They'll also make a slight name change by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      No. It's merely directed research with a heavy emphasis on real-world applicability.

      If you leaf through modern comp-sci disserations and research projects, you'll find that it's unusual for them to say "we really don't know what the hell is going to happen if we try". Instead, they state specific objectives and methods such as improving database performance through reordering lock queues or aggregating transactions that work with shared code or data. It's no less engineering than what DoD likes to see.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
  22. no reg. link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here's a link a link where no registration is required.

    People! When you submit a link to the NYT use the New York Times Link Generator!

  23. Misleading /. Title by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not cutting spending. It's just redirecting it, i.e. "sharply cutting such spending at universities...in favor of financing more classified work and narrowly defined projects..."

    It says that in the first sentence. The NYT title is more accurate.

  24. it's $ distribution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    there is a budget
    the goal of those on the receiving end is to increase it or at least keep it the same.
    when 'hard' military expenses are low, lots of this budget is justified by research. otherwise it's bullets, planes, tanks, etc.

  25. so what.. by danielk1982 · · Score: 2

    We don't need the military to drive computer innovation..we're doing fine.

  26. You know what's funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Even with all these budget cuts to stuff we all care about, the budget deficit is still growing...

    The war in iraq has created a quagmire that sucks up all our money... Which mostly goes to the private army industry.

    1. Re:You know what's funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thats because the rest of the world realises if its going to fight USA it doesnt need guns, just make your country worthless,
      China and Japan already own a massive amount of US holdings, if they sell your economy will collapse in an instant
      so keep pissing them and the rest of the world off, please

  27. short sighted by sfcat · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This reminds me of the time the patent office was closed in the 19th century because someone proclaimed that everything that could be invented, had been invented. This is very short signed. The number of advances from DARPA research is quite impressive. Many top CS schools get quite a bit of money from DARPA. I don't know how they'll make up this shortfall. Of all the things to cut from the government budget, this is one of the worst. I'm not going to mention the B-word but how many stupid decisions is this administration going to make. How about we cut some of the congressional perks? Or any of the other 9000 things the federal government wastes on every year. Software is one of our few exporting industries, and now we are cutting its funding too. Not the end of the world, but still not a good thing.

    --
    "Those that start by burning books, will end by burning men."
  28. Re:My question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dude. Four words: R. T. F. A.

    These is not, I repeat NOT, about budget
    cuts. It's about budget shifts. The same
    money is being spent on *companies* instead
    of *schools*. Got it?

    In fact, the DARPA funding is up, big
    time, since 2001. (Hint: DARPA is part
    of the military.)

  29. AwOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh great... there goes teh Internet!

  30. Re:My question... by notque · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So here's my question: how many Slashdot users are going to whine here about DARPA not giving out enough research money and then wander over to DailyKos and whine there about how the Bush administration has brought about the largest budget deficits in US history?

    And how many people will post arguements that are entirely nonsensical.

    They aren't cutting the cost. They are redirecting it.

    AND!

    I assure you that this funding is no where near the funding of the Iraqi war.

    Which had nothing to do with 9/11.

    So Bush made a choice to attack Iraq, gave us justification that at best was terrible intelligence and at worst was a bold faced lie.

    Free money doesn't come without a cost to something else.

    Exactly, The cost of the Iraq war is not only lives, but could fund social security and medicare quite nicely.

    --
    http://use.perl.org
  31. My experience of DARPA CS funding by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    My experience of DARPA's funding of "CS" is putting all 64 bit alternatives to the 32-bit (segmented) IP address plus 16-bit port out of business.

    Aside from Xerox's 64 bit MAC address which was shelved as the basis for IP addresses, there was another standard promoted by a group of companies from Apple to Atari to Western Electric/Bell Labs to Packet Cable to Knight-Ridder circa 1982 which consisted of an unsegmented system identifier and object identifier combined in an 64 bit address -- the SID growing from the LSB up and the OID growing from the MSB down.

    It would have been a very different and far superior world if they had not been stopped by DARPA's idiots.

    1. Re:My experience of DARPA CS funding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hierarchical addresses are highly important to the functioning of the modern Internet. While the Internet may have originally been conceived as a technology which could survive a nuclear attack, the practical Internet as evolved would certainly not be able to. Structure in the IP address space is key to high performance routing, a legacy which is being carried over into the 128-bit IPv6 address space. What can you say, you canna refute the laws of physics.

  32. Budget Defecit by Mike1024 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In these times of budget shortfalls and spiralling national debt, money has to be saved somewhere. Things with unknown results a long way in the future are an obvious target.

    Does it suck? Sure. But America has shown in elections it doesn't want European-style high taxes to pay for stuff, and when you can't pay for stuff, you can't have stuff.

    Blah blah economy blah blah free market forces blah blah alledgedly unpatriotic intellectuals blah blah small government blah blah starve the beast blah blah 9-11 blah blah blah.

    Michael

    --
    "Goodness me, how unlike the FBI to abuse the trust of the American public." -- The Onion
    1. Re:Budget Defecit by be-fan · · Score: 1

      In times of budget shortfalls and spiralling national debt, long-term research is the last thing you want to cut. To use a programming analogy, if you have a project that is running late, and you're starting to hurt for cash, you don't cut the programming team in half...

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    2. Re:Budget Defecit by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      That's not necessarily the tightest analogy.

      DARPA, after all, is not a for-profit entity; nor is most of the research funding going into for-profit projects. Instead, it has a specific mission for supporting research relevant to the needs of the Department of Defense -- not general-purpose research.

      There's other infrastructure for supporting other forms of research, such as the National Science Foundation, which provides a LOT of grants and does actually have a broader mandate. Other departments as well fund research relevant to their particular areas. One could actually argue that DARPA's treading on the territory of the NSF with a lot of the research it funds. Even if DARPA focused completely on defense-related work, that does not mean that the government as a whole would no longer be funding non-defense related work because it's hardly the only public giver of grants.

      It's not a bad thing for government agencies to focus on their assigned missions. Doing so is rather necessary if one's going to sanely assign budget allocations, for instance.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    3. Re:Budget Defecit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      In these times of budget shortfalls and spiralling national debt, money has to be saved somewhere. Things with unknown results a long way in the future are an obvious target.

      WTF. No money will be saved as a result of this, it's just being spent somewhere else.

      Does it suck? Sure. But America has shown in elections it doesn't want European-style high taxes to pay for stuff, and when you can't pay for stuff, you can't have stuff.

      What ? We have all the stuff we need plus more and we don't pay for it anyways. Check out our deficit sometime !

      We should pull out all of our troops from afghanistan, iraq, korea, europe, the entire pacific rim. NOW THAT WOULD BE SAVING US SOME $$$.

      Instead, people say "our social security is being financed by foreigners." No, our military is. Thats my perspective, like it or leave it bitch.

    4. Re:Budget Defecit by Forbman · · Score: 1

      Does it suck? Sure. But America has shown in elections it doesn't want European-style high taxes to pay for stuff, and when you can't pay for stuff, you can't have stuff.

      But does it suck more to have to pay for things you don't want?

      Oh well. The Republican side of Congress, and now the Administration, has shown it doesn't really care much what the majority of people think (how many of the polls were really in favor of the HoR continuing with their impeachment proceedings against Clinton?), and how hard will the Prez continue to pound sand w.r.t. SocSec reform (why not instead lower the rates, and boost the limits on IRAs/401Ks/etc.)?

      The only people who don't mind the current tax structure (even as they bitch about it) are the ones most able to dodge it.

  33. CS = Computer Science by saskboy · · Score: 1

    Not Customer Service.

    Why isn't it an editor's requirement to define every TLA in a headline?

    --
    Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
    1. Re:CS = Computer Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm so glad DARPA funds customer service research.

    2. Re:CS = Computer Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Me too, and hopefully enough people RTFA to make more TLA jokes :-)

    3. Re:CS = Computer Science by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

      Why isn't it an editor's requirement to define every TLA in a headline?

      Audience context.

      This isn't a general news site, this is "News for Nerds." In the context of a nerdy audience, CS = "Computer Science".

      Consider other contexts:
      * Sales or business news site: CS = "customer service"
      * Pr0n site: CS = "cock sucking"
      * Teen chat site (non-sexual): CS = "cool shit" (well, it could anyway)
      * Police: CS = "cop shot"
      * Chopstick site: CS = "chopsticks"

      And so on. Context! :)

      Typically though, it should only apply to basic, commonly-understood TLA's. What constitutes "basic, commonly-understood TLA's" is open to debate, but IMO, if it's a TLA found only in a technical paper, define it, and when in doubt, define it. But if it's one that your audience uses on a regular basis, don't define it. It's not a hard-and-fast rule (and maybe the best idea of all is to define TLA's in a dictionary somewhere on the site, for consistency's sake)...
    4. Re:CS = Computer Science by saskboy · · Score: 1

      "
      This isn't a general news site, this is "News for Nerds." "

      Counter Strike, as one poster below me pointed out.

      --
      Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
    5. Re:CS = Computer Science by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

      Touché. :-) I forgot CounterStrike... OK, "CS" needs definition, even here.

      (If I felt like it, I'd try and argue that since /. has subdivisions -- BSD, Development, Science, Politics, Gaming, YRO, etc. -- that the use of "CS" is still dependent on which section the post is posted to. But since this one had no section definition, I can't argue that because /. isn't rigorous enough with their section-labeling for it to work...)

  34. Darpa should have cut spending years ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DARPA should cut spending on basic research - Yeah, it's like country club spending for a group that hasn't produce anything in a long time. DARPA should just buy the product off the shelves, it's a lot cheaper, and heck - it works a lot better.

    High tech is mature - why spend on basic research?

    1. Re:Darpa should have cut spending years ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      High tech is mature - why spend on basic research?

      High tech is currently mature? I'm sure our children and grandchildren will disagree if we give them the chance.

      We should spend on basic research because it provides the foundations for the applied research. Sure, we might have enough "basic material" to go on for a while, but eventually, we're going to need more. We could wait until we need to do more basic research, but there will be a delay and then we'll stagnate for a while. Rather than stagnate, let's keep momentum, or at least try to not stagnate as much.

      You're suggesting we live off the fruits of our parents and grandparents basic research labor while not contributing anything for our children and grandchildren.

      Do you listen to CDs? Do you ever store data on CDs? Do you watch DVDs? Do you ever store data on DVDs?

      If so, then you benefit from basic research that was done over the last few hundred years. If for nothing else, we should spend on basic research for the same reasons that we appreciate people having done basic research in the past: basic research provides the foundations for applied research which provides the deliverables.

      Anybody who questions the value of basic research should read this:

      http://camel.math.ca/vault/future/moody/moody.html

      If everybody just bought off-the-shelf components instead of trying to come up with something new, we'd still be listening to music on a wax cylinder and watching B&W silent movies, or worse.

      Personally, I'm very glad SONY and Philips decided to not continue buying off-the-shelf.

  35. Sadly this isn't an april fools joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, one of the first times I wished something wasn't an april fools joke.

  36. Pure Research by Jameth · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Without even DARPA funding pure research, the US will really be screwed. AT&T, while it was a monopoly, had enough money that it did a lot of rather open ended research. That's gone. XEROX had the PARC for a while. That's gone. We got wonderful benefits from all the research they did for the space program, and now that's nearly gone.

    Pure research is what makes for major innovations. It's what keeps a nation on top. The fact the the US invented the internet is one of the major reasons that the US is still so dominant in the IT field. If the US keeps funding some open-ended goals, it might manage to stay on top through these recessions due to inventing something the rest of the world just doesn't have. With the way things are now, the US will have trouble competing against India and China if it sticks to the same jobs that everyone else does.

    1. Re:Pure Research by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      What a bunch of sensationalist tripe. If you believe that PARC & DARPA are the backbone of scientific research in the US, you really need to get a clue.

    2. Re:Pure Research by NitsujTPU · · Score: 1

      PARC is still around.

      AT&T laid off a lot of good people, but they still have a research branch (not of the magnitude they had before, I'll give you).

      Microsoft has a large research branch.

    3. Re:Pure Research by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If the US keeps funding some open-ended goals, it might manage to stay on top through these recessions
      True. But the question is: who funds it, and how do they do it?

      Is the pentagon the right instrument for this? Should the money come everyone, through involuntary taxes? If some hippie says they'd rather spend the money on something else, do you point a gun at him and tell him he has to pay anyway? If some industrialist says he has some ideas, do you tell him, "Sorry, you can't do this, because only 19% of your employees are minorities?"

    4. Re:Pure Research by Frumious+Wombat · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Pure research is a fraction of what it was 20 years ago. Bell-labs is a shadow of its former self, PARC a wisp, and a very senior IBM fellow said in a seminar that Yorktown Heights has gone from "R&D" to "D&D". ( I think he means development and development, but I get the image of scientists with torches chasing blue-suited accountants through the halls)

      Our basic research situation was bad enough 10 years ago that NEC started buying up the scientists from the other labs that were laying them off, and running it's own basic research facility at Princeton.

      U.S. research used to be a three-sided affair, with the government labs, private industry, and academia, all doing some mixture of applied and basic research, and passing ideas and people between them. Every now and then an idea got loose, and became a real product. Now, we're in the grips of a mindset that believes that the world is too complicated for their undereducated minds to understand, and that a bonus today is worth the entire company tomorrow. Therefore, we're not putting money into forward-looking research, and we're not encouraging people to go into the technical fields, have dreams, and then work to make them real. We're back to the basics; entertaininment, overconsumption, dogma, and War without end.

      After we finally wipe ourselves out, and the racoons evolve to replace us, I hope they're more farsighted than we.

      --
      the more accurate the calculations became, the more the concepts tended to vanish into thin air. R. S. Mulliken
  37. Brains at the top by FidelCatsro · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is another moronic desicions i have seen come from the current US administration in the field of scientific research.
    What worrys me most is the fact they are diverting the funding into short term yield millitary research project ... Which given the current administrations track record is not a positive sign for world peace .
    The 20th centuary can be rememberd for many many things and i think DARPA deserves alot of respect for some of the CS projects it funded , however near totaly ignoring the long term benefits of CS research projects in favour of short term gains will just lead to problems further down the line .
    I was angry enough when the US gouvernemt decided to halt funding to Stem-cell research and other things , now here is another nail.

    --
    The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
    1. Re:Brains at the top by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      Well actually it is particularly amusing in the light of this article posted here not 2 weeks ago in which the President's advisory committee provided a report that specifically cited declining DARPA focus on long term research as a fundamental problem for cybersecurity. The particular details can be found in the report on page 19 (with other references spread throughout).

      Collect together an advisory committee that reports directly to the President. Have them do a study of the state of the nation's IT security, both from a civilian and from a military standpoint). A month after the report is released, do the exact opposite of one of its primary reccomendations.

      I know the government is big (perhaps that's part of the problem?) and that the left hand rarely knows what the right hand is doing, but this is quite ridiculous.

      Jedidiah.

    2. Re:Brains at the top by gtall · · Score: 1

      They didn't do it right after the report, DARPA has been fucking up for the last 10 years. Only is it now getting reported. The advisory commission only hilighted what the problem has become.

  38. Pentagon to Significantly Cut CS Research by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    CS -> Counter Strike ?

    is that how they train men nowadays ??

  39. ACM Worried?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Eh - look like pink slip comming down the ACM throat ? Now maybe ACM is going to yell and scream about outsourcing?

  40. nope just bigger weapons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Report Says Pentagon Spending on Weapons to Soar
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/01/business/01milit ary.html

    I think something is broken in your society, please fix it before the rest of the world takes your toys away (like ruin your economy but you seem to be doing that without much help)

  41. This Totally Makes Sense... by bennomatic · · Score: 4, Funny

    With advances in communications technology, our Defense Department can outsource this sort of research to universities in countries where the cost is much lower. Countries like Iran, Yemen and North Korea are on the forefront of nuclear defense research, and would be happy to accept our funds for these sorts of purposes.

    --
    The CB App. What's your 20?
  42. I need funding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have this really great idea for conquering the universe!!

    Its called a...

    Laser!

  43. your society is broken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    please fix it

  44. Facts about Iraq and Al Qaeda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
    1. Where was Khalid Sheik Mohammed located each time Ramzi Yousef called him while planning the first WTC attack? Iraq.

    2. To where did Ramzi Yousef flee after the first WTC attack? Iraq.

    3. Where did Zarqawi go to hide after he got chased out of Afghanistan after 9/11/2001? Iraq.

    In what country is Salman Pak, a training camp where teams of four or five terrorists were taught to hijack civilian airliners with small knives? Iraq.

    Go ahead, keep fooling yourself that there was no connection between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda. Just because Al Qaeda is based on fanatical Islam doesn't mean someone like Saddam Hussein couldn't use them.

    1. Re:Facts about Iraq and Al Qaeda by notque · · Score: 1

      In what country is Salman Pak, a training camp where teams of four or five terrorists were taught to hijack civilian airliners with small knives?

      Not this Hoax again, I love you neocons and your relentless pursuit of the muddying of the waters.

      If you throw enough bullshit at an arguement it becomes a wash eh?

      Pathetic.

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    2. Re:Facts about Iraq and Al Qaeda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hahah
      "dead wrong"
      ring any bells ?

    3. Re:Facts about Iraq and Al Qaeda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Pathetic? The Honorable Howard Baer, Jr, Federal District Court Judge in NY, disagreed with you back in 2003.

      Yep, a Federal judge ruled in civil court that Iraq provided material support to Al Qaeda in carrying out the 9/11 attacks.

      But because that doesn't fit in with you preordained view of the world, you call it "pathetic".

    4. Re:Facts about Iraq and Al Qaeda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      1. Where was Khalid Sheik Mohammed located each time Ramzi Yousef called him while planning the first WTC attack? Iraq.

      2. To where did Ramzi Yousef flee after the first WTC attack? Iraq.

      3. Where did Zarqawi go to hide after he got chased out of Afghanistan after 9/11/2001? Iraq.

      What does that all that have to do with 9/11? Jack.

      Who wasn't aware that Ansar was encamped on the other side of Kurdish territory where Saddam had no power, but is still passing himself off as an expert on Iraq and 9/11? You.

      I'll see Salman Pak with Fort Benning, a military base hosting a terrorist training camp right in good ol' Georgia, USA. Does that automatically mean Bill Clinton or GWB caused 9/11? Fuck no.
    5. Re:Facts about Iraq and Al Qaeda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Pathetic? The Honorable Howard Baer, Jr, Federal District Court Judge in NY, disagreed with you back in 2003.

      Yep, a Federal judge ruled in civil court that Iraq provided material support to Al Qaeda in carrying out the 9/11 attacks.

      But because that doesn't fit in with you preordained view of the world, you call it "pathetic".


      "None of the defendants has appeared and consequently the Court granted a default judgement against Saddam Hussein..."

      Pathetic.
    6. Re:Facts about Iraq and Al Qaeda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "None of the defendants has appeared and consequently the Court granted a default judgement against Saddam Hussein..."

      Pathetic.


      That means the defendents weren't present to refute the facts that the plaintiffs presented demonstrating connections between Iraq and Al Qaeda. Without those facts the judge would not have ruled in the plaintiff's favor.

      And just how would defendents go about demonstrating that the connections didn't exist in the face of positive evidence, anyway? Seems logically impossible...

      And you're a dumbass.

  45. To GabrielF or the /. editor by slashdot_commentator · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Leading computer scientists, such as David Patterson, the head of the ACM are outraged and worried."

    Outraged? Perhaps you may be outraged, but you slander individuals when you attribute them for saying things they did not say. Nowhere in the article did I read that anyone was outraged.

    The military has decided not to put as much money into basic CS research as they did in the past. "Basic CS research" means theoretical research. By its nature, that means the Pentagon cannot turn around in 3 years and produce a tangible return on its investment. How dare those officials decide to not spend money that's not directly related to killing people or keeping personnel from getting killed! How dare those officials prevent foreign enemies from directly profiting from US funded military research! Why not attack your private sector employer? Most of them have been cutting back funding on basic research.

    It certainly is unfortunate. But if you think basic CS research is critical to the US's well being (or more likely, your well being), bitch out your congressman for not funding research, not the military for doing its job. (Good for you for getting a CS degree, but the world does not owe you a living.)

    --
    There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
    1. Re:To GabrielF or the /. editor by GabrielF · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Okay, perhaps the word outrage was incorrect. Certainly Patterson is quoted as being "worried and depressed" and other computer scientists also express frustration, both at the loss of funding and at the change in DARPA's policies. Maybe I chose the wrong word, but I certainly felt a tinge of outrage from those quoted. I apologize if I was mistaken. As for myself, I'm not outraged (nor do I have a CS degree). As far as I am concerned this is simply a wrongheaded change of policy. Certainly during a time of conflict we need to rush as many useful technologies to the battlefield as possible, but there are many organizations within the defense establishment other than DARPA designed to do this and we are pouring money into them. DARPA's job, as I understand it, isn't to win the current war, but to give us an edge for the next one. It seems foolish to me to throw away the really innovative open-ended research projects on which our economy depends for short term benefits. I'm somewhat surprised that you call my possible miswording "slander" and then spend two paragraphs telling me why what you believe I feel is wrong. I don't feel entitled to a research job and I don't feel that my financial future will be threatened by this decision. I do, however, feel entitled to comment on my country's defense strategy.

  46. Better Formating by Maddog+Batty · · Score: 2, Informative

    April 1 - The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency at the Pentagon - which has long underwritten open-ended "blue sky" research by the nation's best computer scientists - is sharply cutting such spending at universities, researchers say, in favor of financing more classified work and narrowly defined projects that promise a more immediate payoff.

    Hundreds of research projects supported by the agency, known as Darpa, have paid off handsomely in recent decades, leading not only to new weapons, but to commercial technologies from the personal computer to the Internet. The agency has devoted hundreds of millions of dollars to basic software research, too, including work that led to such recent advances as the Web search technologies that Google and others have introduced.

    The shift away from basic research is alarming many leading computer scientists and electrical engineers, who warn that there will be long-term consequences for the nation's economy. They are accusing the Pentagon of reining in an agency that has played a crucial role in fostering America's lead in computer and communications technologies.

    "I'm worried and depressed," said David Patterson, a computer scientist at the University of California, Berkeley who is president of the Association of Computing Machinery, an industry and academic trade group. "I think there will be great technologies that won't be there down the road when we need them."

    University researchers, usually reluctant to speak out, have started quietly challenging the agency's new approach. They assert that Darpa has shifted a lot more work in recent years to military contractors, adopted a focus on short-term projects while cutting support for basic research, classified formerly open projects as secret and placed new restrictions on sharing information.

    This week, in responding to a query from the staff of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Darpa officials acknowledged for the first time a shift in focus. They revealed that within a relatively steady budget for computer science research that rose slightly from $546 million in 2001 to $583 million last year, the portion going to university researchers has fallen from $214 million to $123 million.

    The agency cited a number of reasons for the decline: increased reliance on corporate research; a need for more classified projects since 9/11; Congress's decision to end controversial projects like Total Information Awareness because of privacy fears; and the shift of some basic research to advanced weapons systems development.

    In Silicon Valley, executives are also starting to worry about the consequences of Darpa's stinting on basic research in computer science.

    "This has been a phenomenal system for harnessing intellectual horsepower for the country," said David L. Tennenhouse, a former Darpa official who is now director of research for Intel. "We should be careful how we tinker with it."

    University scientists assert that the changes go even further than what Darpa has disclosed. As financing has dipped, the remaining research grants come with yet more restrictions, they say, often tightly linked to specific "deliverables" that discourage exploration and serendipitous discoveries.

    Many grants also limit the use of graduate students to those who hold American citizenship, a rule that hits hard in computer science, where many researchers are foreign.

    The shift at Darpa has been noted not just by those researchers directly involved in computing technologies, but by those in other fields supported by the agency.

    "I can see they are after deliverables, but the unfortunate thing is that basic research gets squeezed out in the process," said Wolfgang Porod, director of the Center for Nano Sc

    --
    wot no sig
    1. Re:Better Formating by obdulio · · Score: 1

      April 1 - The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency at the Pentagon -

      look at the date, it says everything.....

      --
      PENAROL: Seras eterno como el tiempo y floreceras en cada primavera.
  47. Does decent formatting mean nothing to you? by admiralh · · Score: 3, Informative

    Modding up to 5 a 15-second cut and paste post is simply ridiculous.

    You moderators ought to be ashamed of yourselves.

    --
    Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.
    1. Re:Does decent formatting mean nothing to you? by notque · · Score: 1, Funny

      You moderators ought to be ashamed of yourselves.

      DEAR GOD I KNOW

      Cause slashdot moderation is the most important thing in your daily lives.

      ASHAMED. COMPLETELY ASHAMED.

      AShamed - Feeling inferior, inadequate, or embarrassed

      You should feel inferior.

      Inadequate!

      EMBARRASSED!

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    2. Re:Does decent formatting mean nothing to you? by bcattwoo · · Score: 1, Funny
      Modding up to 5 a 15-second cut and paste post is simply ridiculous. You moderators ought to be ashamed of yourselves.
      Yeah with that karma boost AC posts are going to start off rated +2 now.
    3. Re:Does decent formatting mean nothing to you? by techno-vampire · · Score: 3, Insightful
      You moderators ought to be ashamed of yourselves.

      Modding a post up again is easier than looking for a post that hasn't been modded yet. "Me too" mods don't take thought, and that's why they're so popular. Finding the unspotted nuggets of gold hidden in the dross is much more rewarding, but it does take work and that's why most moderators never even try. If they did, we'd have less posts modded to +5, and a lot more at +2 and +3.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    4. Re:Does decent formatting mean nothing to you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You moderators ought to be ashamed of yourselves.

      BAD moderators! BAD!

      (No bone for you.)

      There. I think that put the fear of God back in 'em. Ha, look at the moderators, whimpering and making puddles in the corner! I'm telling you, give the moderators an inch and they take a mile. Well, I'm not the only one carrying a riding crop around here, moderators, so keep your noses clean and LAY OFF THE MOD POINTS.

  48. Budget cut aphorism by Toby+The+Economist · · Score: 2, Insightful

    > Leading computer scientists, such as David
    > Patterson, the head of the ACM are outraged and
    > worried.

    Everyone who's budget is cut is outraged and worried.

    --
    Toby

  49. Rome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    This is another step towards the U.S. becoming military, unproductive Rome which used the prosperity from peaceful, enlightened Greece to bring misery and death to its people.

    Greece produced a wealth of culture. From Plato and Aristotle's philosophy on governments we derive our idea of the republic, where every individual's rights are important, and democracy, where the people rule. From Euclid and Pythagoras we know the principles of geometry and that the earth is round. These were discovered around 300-500BC.

    Then the Romans came and put an end to this period of amazing discovery. It would be a millennium before the Rennaisance and science would be born. In Rome, everything was put in terms of fighting war. Math was only useful if it could be directly used in battle. It was taught to students in forms like "a phalanx eight deep and twenty wide consists of how many warriors?" People were not encouraged to learn for learning's sake.

    Let's not make the same mistake.

    1. Re:Rome by KtHM · · Score: 1

      So, what you're saying is New England and the west coast should secede, before it's too late?

      I agree. :)

    2. Re:Rome by BigJStudd · · Score: 0

      Wow, Europeans were the ones who discovered science? And after "the dark ages" too eh? Wow, is there anything our white skined brethern can't do? :)

    3. Re:Rome by belmolis · · Score: 1
      peaceful, enlightened Greece

      Hardly. It's true that the Greeks were not as interested in or successful at empire-building as the Romans, but they were hardly peaceful. Ever hear of the Persian wars? How about the conquests of Alexander? When they weren't fighting the Persians, they were engaged in constant warfare among themselves. There wasn't any such thing as "Greece" - there were a whole bunch of city states and petty kingdoms.

      Nor were the Greeks as enlightened as TV history makes out. In "democratic" Athens at the height of its glory, only 1/4 of the adult population could vote: half the population was female, and women had hardly any rights, much less the vote. And half the population consisted of slaves, who had even fewer rights than women.

      It's true that the intellectual and artistic accomplishments of Greece overshadowed those of Rome, but it isn't true that everything was great in Greece until the barbarous Romans took over.

  50. Oh no! our firehose of money is running out! by johnny+cashed · · Score: 1

    That is why some CS researchers are upset. DARPA may be responsible for the internet, but what other important research has come to the CS world as a result? Examples please. If you say TIA then I don't want their money funding such research. Did Gnutella come from DARPA research? No. P2P might just be seen as a tool for infringment, but it has potential for much more. It is the basis of the internet. It helps route around censorship and "top level" control. The internet doesn't need DARPA anymore. Most of the new breakthroughs in CS are gonna come from some teenage hacker and his peers, not to mention those who make the hardware and software that the internet runs on. The pentagon wouldn't know 4th generation warfare if it bit them in the ass. And it is. The future of warfare is the men on the ground. Not some high falutin' computer system. Leave the CS research to computer people, not the DoD. They need to figure out how to prevent politicians from getting them involved in quagmires.

    1. Re:Oh no! our firehose of money is running out! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're stupid. DARPA doesn't have employees that work on projects in the sense that the Pentagon has employees that work on projects. DARPA gives grants to university researchers to work on projects. More university CS research is funded by DARPA than by any other national agency.

    2. Re:Oh no! our firehose of money is running out! by johnny+cashed · · Score: 1

      Same difference. DARPA supplies the bankroll. Same with most gov't organizations. They don't make anything, they fund contractors, and others to do things. I know how the Gov't works, they are a managment organization. A big bureaucracy. With a lot of overhead. Paperwork, paperwork, audits, audits, etc. To keep everyone who receives Gov't (taxpayer) money honest. How much money is wasted due to the bureaurcracy? NASA, same way. NASA doesn't "make" anything. They manage contractors. They provide $$$ to do research and make things. That said, a very small precentage of funds, do make things, like prototypes and such. But on the whole, the Gov't doesn't manufacture anything. Or do its own research, it is contracted out.

    3. Re:Oh no! our firehose of money is running out! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That is why some CS researchers are upset. DARPA may be responsible for the internet, but what other important research has come to the CS world as a result? Examples please.

      Um, can you say "Google"? The entire field of information retrieval, which is largely DARPA funded, has been around for 30 years, and has given us companies like Yahoo and Google. Without DARPAs funding of this basic research, the ideas and the knowledge to create search engine technology would not have been there in the 90s when the time was right for it to explode as it did.

      Google, for example, has not innovated as much as you think it might have. Its quality comes from decades of prior DARPA-funded research. Even PageRank was not unique (see Eugene Garfield's work in the 1970s).

      Is that example good enough for ya?

  51. Re:My question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The cost of the Iraq war is not only lives, but could fund social security and medicare quite nicely.

    The cost has been worth the rewards. Social Security and Medicare cannot come before security.

    The security of the USA and the world has been better now that Saddam is in jail and a free democratic government in Iraq is formed. The dominoes are falling in the Middle East, and draining the swamp in Iraq will prove to be one of the most brilliant moves ever.

  52. Makes sense.... by otis+wildflower · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... When you're not at war, keep your techies on the payroll doing whatever will keep 'em interested, but when you're at war, refocus.

    The US is at war. Get used to it.

    If you don't like the strings that are attached with the money, don't accept the money. Theo didn't, which is fine, and his posse whined about it somewhat, which is annoying but also fine.

    Besides, given how much stuff DoD is buying COTS, it looks like private industry and academia can handle 'pure' research anyway, and if you're gonna fight a number of wars, give away tax cuts for the rich and free viagra for the elderly, you gotta find the money somewhere...

    1. Re:Makes sense.... by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      The US is at war. Get used to it.

      There has been no rationing, no draft, no tax hikes...

      we're not at war. We're sending soldiers overseas to fight, but the United States of America is not at war.

    2. Re:Makes sense.... by jdunn14 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The US is at war. Get used to it.

      Let's see is it Eastasia or Eurasia. Which enemy is it again? I forget. Who is it that when defeated we can declare peace and not just always move though continual war?

      Anyway, as a side note for those people asking, "What has darpa research done for us recently?" Well, keep in mind that when academic research into the original internet protocols and such was in progress you could have asked the same thing, not knowing what was coming. Also realize that the skill set required for true research and the skill set required for producing a product are not the same thing. Some people are suited for research some are not. Both kinds of people are needed for longterm progress.

      Lastly, some guy was pointing out that p2p did not come from academia. That may be true, but significant advances in things like scalability, privacy, and simplicity are in the works. Yes revolutionary ideas can come from anywhere, but someone usually has to slog through many steps of little improvements to make those ideas reach their full potential. Complex systems do not tend to spring fully formed from someone's head like a greek goddess. Instead, someone has to do the research, and often that research does not have a clear (short-term) monetary incentive, so don't expect industry to do it.

    3. Re:Makes sense.... by hyfe · · Score: 1
      The US is at war. Get used to it.?

      Oh, with who exactly?

      --
      "" How about taking the safety labels off everything, and let the stupidity-problem solve itself? """
    4. Re:Makes sense.... by otis+wildflower · · Score: 1

      Let's see is it Eastasia or Eurasia. Which enemy is it again? I forget. Who is it that when defeated we can declare peace and not just always move though continual war?

      It's against the people who destroyed the twin towers and all those who sympathize with them and their ideologies.

      Also, we fought and won a cold ideological war of a much starker, more manichaean nature against communism that lasted fifty years. And the commies had nucular weapons. If you're old enough to recall, the arguments among the allies were much the same ("cowboy" president, "reckless" policies, the British PM being a "lackey" or "poodle", etc), and they're as stupid now as they turned out to be then.

      Anyway, as a side note for those people asking, "What has darpa research done for us recently?" Well, keep in mind that when academic research into the original internet protocols and such was in progress you could have asked the same thing, not knowing what was coming. Also realize that the skill set required for true research and the skill set required for producing a product are not the same thing. Some people are suited for research some are not. Both kinds of people are needed for longterm progress.

      Then again, what was the purpose of Internet Protocol development in the first place? "Pure research"? Or command and control capability in the event of nuclear war?

      Instead, someone has to do the research, and often that research does not have a clear (short-term) monetary incentive, so don't expect industry to do it.

      That's what academia and philanthropic foundations are for.

    5. Re:Makes sense.... by otis+wildflower · · Score: 1

      There has been no rationing, no draft, no tax hikes...

      OK...

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish-American_War
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippine-American_W ar
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persian_Gulf_War

      And where were these policies during the Cold War?

    6. Re:Makes sense.... by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 1

      "It's against the people who destroyed the twin towers and all those who sympathize with them and their ideologies."

      The people that destroyed the twin towers are dead. The current war in Iraq has exactly nothing to do with them. As far as "sympathizers", we may want to wait until DARPA discovers a device for reading minds before we start figthing people based on their states of mind.

      "Also, we fought and won a cold ideological war of a much starker, more manichaean nature against communism that lasted fifty years. And the commies had nucular weapons. If you're old enough to recall, the arguments among the allies were much the same ("cowboy" president, "reckless" policies, the British PM being a "lackey" or "poodle", etc), and they're as stupid now as they turned out to be then."

      As somebody who lived in the Eastern block I can tell you that the idea that Reagan and his poodle (Thatcher was it?) somehow won the cold war is a hilarious fantasy. If you want to give credit to one person you will be much more accurate to credit Madonna.

    7. Re:Makes sense.... by otis+wildflower · · Score: 1

      As far as "sympathizers", we may want to wait until DARPA discovers a device for reading minds before we start figthing people based on their states of mind.

      What would be better would be to shrink such things down to bacteria/nano size and implant explosives, ala 'Diamond Age'.. Now _that's_ research I'd support...

      As somebody who lived in the Eastern block I can tell you that the idea that Reagan and his poodle (Thatcher was it?) somehow won the cold war is a hilarious fantasy. If you want to give credit to one person you will be much more accurate to credit Madonna.

      Bullshit. It was bankrupting the Soviet thru SDI threats, building out Pershing and Trident, and the Pope's visit to Solidarity that catalyzed the end of the cold war. The ex-Soviet officials up to Gorby himself admit as much, and there are plenty of ex-dissidents who credit Reagan, Thatcher, and the Pope with the straws that broke the commie back. I'm sure there's Osties clinging to their DDR flags who would, to this day, bitterly complain about the fall of the Berlin wall and the death of their ideology. Fuck them.

      The end of communism, particularly its peaceful end, was never inevitable, especially if those who advocated coexistence and accomodation were permitted to prop them up any further with more agricultural subsidies and humanitarian aid. Why didn't the fall start after 1956? 1968? Reagan's hardcore stance (or, dare I dream, a competent CIA?) kept killing Soviet premiers until they found one that could make a deal.

    8. Re:Makes sense.... by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 1

      Reagan's "hardcore stance" was created solely to give hard-ons to his uninformed halfwit voters in the states. Reagan did not bother the "commies" one bit.

      And your cute little fantasy about the CIA knocking off leaders is ridiculous -- they were just old.

      Anyways if you have to think of grand theories about how the Soviet union fell you might be better served to actually learn something about the soviet union. For example, SDI could not magically remotely bankrupt the soviets -- they must do something in response to SDI which bankrupted them. So what was it? What did they do in response? If you actually do the research you will find that they did more or less nothing in response to SDI ... i.e. they had correctly identified it as a lie to begin with.

      Comunism ended because most people that cared about communism at all got old and died. Thats pretty much it.

    9. Re:Makes sense.... by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      And where were these policies during the Cold War?

      Have you seen the size of the DoD's budget during the cold war?

      Or the fact that both proxy wars we fought during the cold war had drafts?

      Or are you simply ignoring what I said altogether. The United States is not at war. We may be sending troops, but we're not. And every failure we suffer can be blamed at Bush's reprehensible decision to act as if we had not been attacked and were not at war throughout his term.

    10. Re:Makes sense.... by daijo78 · · Score: 1

      "Bullshit. It was bankrupting the Soviet thru SDI threats, building out Pershing and Trident, and the Pope's visit to Solidarity that catalyzed the end of the cold war." Ahhh... The TV coverage famous people get when they die can really give people some valuable insight;)

    11. Re:Makes sense.... by Forbman · · Score: 1

      Also, we fought and won a cold ideological war of a much starker, more manichaean nature against communism that lasted fifty years. And the commies had nucular weapons. If you're old enough to recall, the arguments among the allies were much the same ("cowboy" president, "reckless" policies, the British PM being a "lackey" or "poodle", etc), and they're as stupid now as they turned out to be then.

      Whatever. But in some cases we're against perceived grudges that have a couple of thousand years' history behind them. Hard to just roll that back instantly.

      Just go to Atlanta, GA, and openly say something smart like, "Sherman should have kept going..."

      About as smart as wearing orange to a Saint Patrick's Day parade in Chicago or Boston.

    12. Re:Makes sense.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no tax hikes

      That's the beauty of deficit financing. The tax hikes will come later, not now. Either that or there will be cuts to government services. Since people can't usually stomach all of one or the other, you may see both.

      The feds found a way of avoiding "tax and spend". They just "spend and not tax" now. Somebody else will tax later. Mo matter how much people may hate "tax and spend", it's better than "tax and not spend" later, where you see less and less for more and more money. I lived in an economy that went through that. It's depressing.

      Where have all the fiscal conservatives gone?

  53. Mod This up, It is NOT Flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To criticize the writeup for wrong assertions is not flamebait. This is not what mod points are supposed to be for.

    Just because you didn't like the content does not mean it should be modded down. The poster makes a very good and direct point about the shoddy journalism, it should be read by the readers.

    This is mod abuse at its worst.

  54. Re:My question... by notque · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The cost has been worth the rewards.

    So you would give up your child's life to secure Fallujah?

    So you condone lies as justification for the poorer class of America to go fight for what you deem important.

    Social Security and Medicare cannot come before security.

    Not only should it come before security, WHAT ABOUT THE IRAQ WAR IS SECURITY?

    The security of the USA and the world has been better now that Saddam is in jail and a free democratic government in Iraq is formed.

    Wrong, the security of the US is obviously worse because of this. You are completely wrong.

    The dominoes are falling in the Middle East, and draining the swamp in Iraq will prove to be one of the most brilliant moves ever.

    That's why Bush only takes credit for it when who comes into power fits his agenda.

    --
    http://use.perl.org
  55. Copyright Infringement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Its amusing how slashdot really hates GPL violators, but have problem modding up blatant copyright infringement like this.

    This copyright notice makes it quite clear you have no right to copy and paste like this. This post is at +5 right now shows what hypocrites you are.

  56. Re: Possible misuse of April Fool? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Published: April 1, 2005

    As many wise? people here have noted, april fools would be a good way of "telling the truth" and trying to get away with it under the guise of april fools - case in point the scientific (Un)American swipe at creationalism.

    Maybe at a congressional hearing in the not too distant future the Pentagon could state that they had full dislosure of thier spending - hey we stated so clearly on our report on [b]April 1, 2005[/b]

    And if anyone queries it before that, hey it was [b]April 1[/b], 2005

    Double bluff anyone?

  57. It shouldn't come as a surprise. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Is it any surprise that the Pentagon would cut off those who have pathologically attacked them for years? If these University effetes were so smart, why didn't they see this coming? The insular world of the university has been the primary source of the vitriol directed against the Pentagon and Donald Rumsfeld. Those who unfairly attack the Pentagon with their continual vitriolic drumbeat of lies and distortions do not deserve to benefit from Pentagon programs.

    The Defense Department is run by real everyday people. They come home at night and watch the TV like everyone else. When they turn on CNN and see some Professor Steinberg of NYU, a frowzy wild haired Stallman lookalike, calling the Pentagon "genocidal nazis" they may become a little irked. That they have been patient for so long is nothing short of amazing.

  58. Experience of a Governement Contractor by Paradox · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So, I program for Lockheed, and therefore for the Air Force directly, and I can tell you the kind of feedback we've been getting. I can also tell about the kind of feedback we got when I was hanging around the Computer Security groups at UCSB's graduate labs.

    The Government seems fed up with Computers. They need them, they need them incredibly badly, but they can't seem to get exactly what they want. This goes for both contract work and research work. I'll adress it in two parts.

    For Research Work: Two major factors are at work here. First is the rule of 80/20. We can do 80 percent of what DARPA (or whatever they're named this week) wants, but that last 20% ("Now make it distributed!" or "Now make it fault tolerant!" or "Now make it cryptographically secure!") needed to make the system usable is really really hard. Lots of research projects have hit dead ends. You expect this to happen in research, of course, but still...

    Also, I always got the vibe that DARPA was more than slightly pissed off with us Open Sourcing everything left and right. Maybe it was just us they seemed cross at (and by cross I mean grants and funding tended to shift away from projects with lots of open source offerings), but I've heard other folks doing research mention this too.

    I mean, you can easily get the impression that the Government has an attitude of, "You're supposed to be working for us!" Every time a group open sources DARPA-funded stuff (or the components of it, which is usually the case), other people benefit from the research. This may leave a sour taste in the mouth of the accountants over there.

    For Contract Work: The US Government's policy is horribly broken. "Cost Plus" contracts may have been great in the 50's for jets and stuff, but we're reaching the point with computer systems and software where we're proving that Design Up Front does not work for large projects.

    But, the various millitary branches have so much CYA (Cover Your Ass) paperwork, precedent and process that they cannot disentangle themselves. It's a really bad situation for them, because they have to adapt or die, and they're dying. This is not to say that the Army or Air Force will "go out of business," it's that projects... multi-billion dollar projects... are failing every year now. New projects, huge projects that even a lightweight process would need hundreds of people to deal with, are starting at costs that are so low they'd barely turn a profit for a contractor, because the Army/Navy/Air Force expects to fail.

    What I think the Government really needs to do is become more tech-savvy in general. They need to start paying top dollar to hire the best engineers. No more of this "We Give Good Benefits" junk. The Government needs to have its own research groups and they need to be driven by results, technical excellence, and they need to have open-ended budgets (that are limited by results).

    --
    Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
    1. Re:Experience of a Governement Contractor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The government needs to hire the best and brightest based on merit and ability. Unfortunately this is not the case. Anyone who has worked on large government contracts knows what I'm talking about. Every project is loaded with dimwits, affirmative action hires, quota fillers, and other unqualified individuals. I know one office in the Pentagon where out of a group of 20 people, maybe only 3 or 4 do any useful work. The others are just picking up their paychecks.

    2. Re:Experience of a Governement Contractor by Tayssir+John+Gabbour · · Score: 1
      Every time a group open sources DARPA-funded stuff (or the components of it, which is usually the case), other people benefit from the research. This may leave a sour taste in the mouth of the accountants over there.
      Opensourcing basic research threatens future commercialization in many peoples' eyes.
    3. Re:Experience of a Governement Contractor by nemoest · · Score: 1

      For Contract Work: The US Government's policy is horribly broken. "Cost Plus" contracts may have been great in the 50's for jets and stuff, but we're reaching the point with computer systems and software where we're proving that Design Up Front does not work for large projects.

      I don't think that the type of contracts the US Government issues is the problem with IT projects. Really, from a contracting standpoint how is developing a brand new, never tested weapon system different than developing a brand new, never tested IT system?

      IANACO (I am not a contracting officer) but from what I have learned:
      Cost Plus type contracts (of which there are 3 types) are used where Firm Fixed Price contracts would not be applicable.

      FAR 16.301-2 Application (of Cost-Reimbursement Contracts) Cost-reimbursement contracts are suitable for use only when uncertainties involved in contract performance do not permit costs to be estimated with sufficient accuracy to use any type of fixed-price contract.

      For those of us unfamiliar with the contracting terms, fixed-price contracts say I will pay you X dollars for X goods/services. These types of contracts essentially say I will pay you an amount determined by a formula based which can be based on the cost you incur, the performance of your company and the system, whether you deliver on schedule, etc. Now here are the 3 types:

      FAR 16.304 Cost-Plus-Incentive-Fee Contracts
      (I'm paraphrasing)
      These give the contractor an initially negotiated fee to be adjusted later by a formula based on total allowable costs to total target costs.

      FAR 16.305 Cost-Plus-Award-Fee Contracts
      (Paraphrasing)
      These give the contractor a fee consisting of a base amount fixed at the start and an award amount determined by the Government sufficient to "provide motivation for excellence in contract performance."

      FAR 16.306 Cost-Plus-Fixed-Fee Contracts
      (Direct Quote)
      A cost-plus-fixed-fee contract is a cost-reimbursement contract that provides for payment to the contractor of a negotiated fee that is fixed at the inception of the contract. The fixed fee does not vary with actual cost, but may be adjusted as a result of changes in the work to be performed under the contract. This contract type permits contracting for efforts that might otherwise present too great a risk to contractors, but it provides the contractor only a minimum incentive to control costs.
      (Emphasis mine)

      These types contracts are actually more beneficial for the contractor than Firm Fixed Price type because they allow for the amount paid to be increased or decreased based on the contractor's performance. There are also incentive contracts, but I leave those as an exercise to the reader.

      Couple this with FAR 39.103 Modular Contracting (which was specifically created for IT projects and is required by the Clinger-Cohen Act) which allows each piece of a large IT project to be broken down into a separate module and then contracted for individually, I don't think contracting is the problem here.

      I think the problem is the same problem that other large organizations have with IT projects which is that IT projects are just difficult to design, manage, and implement. But if you don't like the contracting types you can always have your company lobby for a better type. It isn't like Congress can't change the playing field.

    4. Re:Experience of a Governement Contractor by Atev · · Score: 1

      "Cost Plus" contracts may have been great in the 50's for jets and stuff, but we're reaching the point with computer systems and software where we're proving that Design Up Front does not work for large projects.

      Amen

      --
      The danger from computers is not that they will eventually get as smart as men, but we will meanwhile agree to meet them
  59. Fusion research... by gnuman99 · · Score: 5, Informative
    Unfortunately, AI is very much like Fusion. It's only 20 years away (for the next century)

    No, AI is nothing like fusion. We *don't* know what is required (software-wise) to make a robot alive. We *do* know how to make fusion energy efficient and it was done.

    The perception that fusion doesn't work is from the early days of fusion research. Without doing any actual testing, physicists just though if you put the plasma in a magnetic bottle, you get fusion. When they actually done the experiment, they discovered more is going on in the plasma. You can't treat it as a gas. You can't treat it as a liquid. It is kind of a combination of both. Virtually everything in physics with regards to fluid/gas flow, as well as electromagnetism is part of the fusion reactor. Only NOW, after the experiments were done, do we understand WHAT is required to make fusion work and HOW to make it work.

    Unlike AI, fusion research has been done. It works. It is here now. All that is needed is money to build a test reactor based on *current* knowledge (no pun intended :), work out final nicks in application of the theory, and then we can build the first commercial fusion reactor.

    The obstacle to fusion is not science (or lack thereof), but lack of funding. You see, what people heard in the 60s about fusion, they still think it applies today.

    1. Re:Fusion research... by Joe+Tie. · · Score: 1

      We *don't* know what is required (software-wise) to make a robot alive.

      I'm not sure if that's really fair. I'd strongly agree that we don't know what's required for mammal-like intelligence, or sentience, but I would classify current AI as among the level of simple biological intelligence.

      --
      Everything will be taken away from you.
    2. Re:Fusion research... by Mike1024 · · Score: 1

      All that is needed is money to build a test reactor based on *current* knowledge (no pun intended :), work out final nicks in application of the theory, and then we can build the first commercial fusion reactor.

      The obstacle to fusion is not science (or lack thereof), but lack of funding. You see, what people heard in the 60s about fusion, they still think it applies today.


      Have you heard about ITER?

      My understanding is it could start being built any time now...

      Michael

      --
      "Goodness me, how unlike the FBI to abuse the trust of the American public." -- The Onion
    3. Re:Fusion research... by pilkul · · Score: 1
      I would classify current AI as among the level of simple biological intelligence.

      I don't know what research labs you've been to but the AIs I've seen can barely locate or tell apart simple objects. They walk slowly and only over even surfaces, they bump into walls and fall down stairs. No, current AIs aren't even on the level of insects for the most part. (That said, it is true that we mostly know what's required to bring them to that level.)

    4. Re:Fusion research... by gnuman99 · · Score: 1
      All reactors we had until now cannot be used to produce energy. We need a test reactor that can be used to produce energy, like the fission reactors. It can be used to tweak the design before comitting 100 billion to build 20+ 10-20GW units and then finding a flaw.

      Anyway, I stand by my statement that there is lack of funding. The reactor will not work until 2016! With proper funding it could be completed in quater of the time and be operational by 2011-2012.

      At this time we can only hope that ITER will not fall behind! (virtually all projects on this timescale do). Hopefully it will lead to a mass-produceable design.

    5. Re:Fusion research... by Joe+Tie. · · Score: 1

      I should probably preface this by saying my experience with AI is pretty low(just a few 'very' small projects for school), and with robotics nothing more than a spectator. Still, I have to wonder if a lot of the limitations have more to do with hardware, and less with the actual AI. Bugs have pretty nice bodies, with lots of sensors and a good amount of flexibility. The current tech doesn't seem to offer anything much on that level, or at least much that could be applied easily to a lightweight mobile robot. Even with that, a lot of insects still bump into walls, windows, and fall off of things. The soccer playing aibos seem to have as much grace and basic environment recognition as many insects. Well, OK, a few insects. Hey, I'm still amazed at fairly cheap devices able to, with some tinkering, do such a good job of differentiating betwen a red ball and things that are not a red ball.

      --
      Everything will be taken away from you.
  60. Oh woe! by haelduksf · · Score: 1

    Oh no. The US military will not own emerging internet technology. Hang on, I need to break out the kleenex.

  61. Re:My question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    So you would give up your child's life to secure Fallujah?

    Since I cannot sign up my children or anyone else into the military, it's a ridiculously stupid question to answer.

    Wrong, the security of the US is obviously worse because of this. You are completely wrong.

    Really, how is it so obviously worse? A murderous dictator who tortured and killed his own people, threatened his neighbors, and supported terrorism is gone, it makes the security OBVIOUSLY worse? Please explain how this is so.

    That's why Bush only takes credit for it when who comes into power fits his agenda.

    Oh ok, I see where your real agenda is. You're not only pissed people have been liberated and democratization is moving forward, you're angry Bush is getting the credit.

  62. Re: Possible misuse of April Fool? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    sadly not

    get your reports here (see 31st of March)

    # Defense Acquisitions: Assessments of Selected Major Weapon Programs GAO-05-301, March 31, 2005
    # Defense Aquisitions: Status of Ballistic Missile Defense Program in 2004 GAO-05-243, March 31, 2005

  63. Focus on the New - not the old by olafva · · Score: 1
    Recent CS research often focuses on traditional CPUs, MPI CPU clusters, etc..as new Intel CPUs drawi 140+ watts (and heroic cooling efforts and SOI.

    Meanwhile FPGAs have displaced DSPs, FFTs and are overtaking CPUs for embedded applications. There are even rumblesof FPGAs seriously impacting the HPC market. Times are a changin so I'm not surprised to see traditional CPU-based CS research being downsized in response to this paradigm shift. Perhaps we need to take VIVA seriously just as Cray, SGI, Starbridge Systems, SRC, Nallatech and others are doing.

    --
    What's past is NOT ALWAYS prologue for the future!
    1. Re:Focus on the New - not the old by The+Archon+V2.0 · · Score: 1
      Meanwhile FPGAs have displaced DSPs, FFTs and are overtaking CPUs for embedded applications. There are even rumblesof FPGAs seriously impacting the HPC market.

      (Tries to think of intelligent reply.)

      Ummmm.... Indeed, verily, pip pip.

      (Okay, that didn't work. Time to BS my way through.)

      IANAL, but one must mind their Ps and Qs (IMHO) about the NSA, or even the CSIS, HQed 770 km NNE of DC, due to their lg. pct. of high-IQ RPGing INTPs and FPSing INTJs, who BTW could put the KO to one's R&D on the QT. OK? (AFK, BRB. CU.)

    2. Re:Focus on the New - not the old by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FPGA - Field Programmable Gate Array
      DSP - Digital Signal Processor
      CPU - Central Processing Unit
      HPC - High Performance Computing
      FFT - I think he made this up.

      FPGAs are ONLY suitable for highly parallel tasks. Unfortunely there is still no easy way for a compiler to find such parallelism in algorithms and effectively map it to arbitrary hardware(whether it be an FPGA array, or CPU array). This is computer science problem, one that should has been completely solved by now.

    3. Re:Focus on the New - not the old by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In this cotext, FFT is the "fast Fourier transform" algorithm.

      The way he used it indicated he doesn't know what it really is. If maybe he's just repeating lab-slang without thinking about the reader and really meant "an FFT accelerator chip". But, then again, I'm into IT and HPC now -- and I haven't worked with FPGAs or embedded systems for a good four years or so.

      P.S. If you want to see FPGAs work, figure out an easy way to describe the configurations that work. Good luck -- you'll need it!

  64. April 1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone else noticed the date of publishing? They're not cutting CS projects.

  65. Re:-1: USians are stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or maybe he's Canadian, and doesn't want to be grouped in with us, by using the term "American".

  66. Well yes, but by Eternally+optimistic · · Score: 1

    You are saying correctly, among other things, "...assuming that population and income projections hold true." That's a significant assumption over 30 years, as it includes the economic behaviour of people who are not even born yet. It's too early to panic about it, and certainly better to spend money on general, "blue sky" research in the (realistic) expectation that some of it will pay off so we can afford to fee all the old folk then. People like me. Assuming those yet-to-be-born can be convinced it's a good idea.

    --
    What keeps me going is my inertia.
  67. the evil that is affluence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's just so sad to see the overly-affluent sell America out. As far as I can see, the real traitors all wear suits and sit in our boardrooms. Face facts, this has nothing to do with research or results. All this is, is the immoral diversion of public funds to privileged people.

    Go ahead, tell yourself how great it is to be an American, all the while you watch it being sold out and do nothing.

  68. Why not setup a civilian fund? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't understand why this needs to be funded by DARPA anyway. Why the hell should we spend whatever odd billions of dollars on military research when it just gets wasted on technologies that give us domestic information technology? I say the solution is really simple: If DARPA doesn't want to fund technology research then cut *DARPA*'s funding and direct the savings directly into the universities!

    It's just an example of the inefficiency of the military establishment. The military had all this money and to the benefit of America and the rest of the world it was letting all the money slip through its fingers into good minded researchers. DARPA doesn't get results so asks for more money. Congress gives DARPA more money and cuts it from other places. DARPA lets more money slip into academic research and continues to get shoddy returns. Now DARPA's figured out it's been played the fool and is starting to use the funds itself.

    Well I think this whole experiment has shown something really simple. DARPA doesn't need that much money to do what it's been doing all these years. And academic research funded by DARPA has led to the America's technological and academic strength. Again, the solution: Cut DARPA's funding, give money to the NSF for use on technology research.

  69. Impact on Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Note that a lot of useful linux bits and pieces were actually US-military/DARPA funded, including things like ReiserFS. The computer people in the military I've met mostly love linux.

  70. I guess the defense contractors complained.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...that too much money was being spent on research and not enough on pork.

  71. America needs to plan ahead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    to steal a quote, Americans think about the next quarter, Japanese think about the next quarter century. it's reflected in almost all facets of American life including high personal debt. we will eventually lose our superpower status thanks to pointy-head bean counters.

  72. The state of things at CISE/NSF by Danathar · · Score: 1

    Since starting work at NSF supporting the CISE (Computer and Information Science and Engineering) Directorate almost 4 years ago I can tell you from first hand experience that their workload has exploded. Make no mistake, the amount of money CISE has gotten has significantly increased (though probably not to the extent that other agencies have cut basic research). The scientists and staff there are working their butts off to review and fund grants. I've sat in on meetings listening to VERY smart people who are "plugged" in to what is going on.

    There are some things Scientists/researchers can do to help things along (not money related).

    1. Learn how to write a grant! (Use proper English, be clear about what you are trying to accomplish).

    2. When given the opportunity, accept a request to become a grant reviewer (called "panelist" in NSF speak)

    3. Don't get all bent out of shape when your grant gets turned down! Like submitting short stories to magazines for publication the majority don't make it. Go back to the drawing board, check your EGO! Listen to people who don't like your idea and see what can be done.

    4. Write your congressman (duh...everybody should do that!) and support more money for NSF! (Well...that's money related but you get the point)

  73. Aww, come on now... by Cl1mh4224rd · · Score: 1

    He obviously put some effort into removing any paragraph breaks. Apparently that's worth a +1 Informative or two nowadays...

    --
    People will pass up steak once a week, for crap every day.
  74. why dont you look at it the other way round by floydman · · Score: 0

    They might be cutting budgest from CS, thats true, but they are still spending it other things, and according to him, from TA "will pay off immediately"...

    Maybe they are working on a new technology (i know, which we wont see for the next 10 years), that will be available...
    At least i hope that is the situation

    --
    The lunatic is in my head
  75. Re:My question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is far more killing of innocents going on in Sudan right now than there possibly ever was in Iraq, but we're not going to stop it because we've made a mess in Iraq that needs fixing.

    Meanwhile, the civilians killed in Iraq have now made more Iraqis angry at the U.S. People who had no truck with the U.S. before are now car bombers and budding terrorists.

  76. Re:My question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You think that setting a precedent for preemption based on nonexistant evidence isn't bad for global security? Now that Japan is starting to remilitarize, what prevents China from going Bush Jr. on us and blowing them up? Put down your crack pipe, man.

  77. CS patron saint - Saint Isodore of Seville by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.catholic-forum.com/saints/sainti04.htm

    Patronage
    computer technicians; computer users; computers; the Internet; schoolchildren; students

    ISIDORE of Seville
    [Saint Isidore of Seville]

    Also known as
    Isidore the Bishop; Schoolmaster of the Middle Ages
    Memorial
    4 April
    Profile
    Son of Severianus and Theodora, people known for their piety. Brother of Saint Fulgentius, Saint Florentina, and Saint Leander of Seville, who raised him after their father's death. Initially a poor student, he gave the problem over to God and became one of the most learned men of his time. Priest. Helped his brother Leander, archbishop of Seville, in the conversion the Visigoth Arians. Hermit.

    Archbishop of Seville c.601, succeeding his brother to the position. Teacher, founder, reformer. Required seminaries in every diocese, wrote a rule for religious orders. Prolific writer including a dictionary, an encyclopedia, a history of Goths, and a history of the world beginning with creation. Completed the Mozarabic liturgy which is still in use in Toledo, Spain. Presided at the Second Council of Seville, and the Fourth Council of Toledo. Introduced the works of Aristotle to Spain.

    Proclaimed Doctor of the Church by Pope Benedict XIV in 1722, and became the leading candidate for patron of computer users and the Internet in 1999.
    Born
    c.560 at Cartagena, Spain
    Died
    4 April 636 at Seville, Spain
    Patronage
    computer technicians; computer users; computers; the Internet; schoolchildren; students
    Representation
    bees; bishop holding a pen surrounded by a swarm of bees; bishop standing near a beehive; old bishop with a prince at his feet; pen; priest or bishop with pen and book; with Saint Leander, Saint Fulgentius, and Saint Florentina; with his Etymologia
    Additional Information
    Google Directory links devoted to or with information about Saint Isidore Domestic Church, by Catherine Fournier
    Catholic Encyclopedia, by John B O'Connor
    For All The Saints, by Katherine Rabenstein
    Zenit.Org news story re patronage
    Ecole Glossary, by Karen Rae Keck
    New Catholic Dictionary
    Lives of the Saints, by Father Alban Butler
    Translate
    español | français | deutsch | italiano | português
    Readings
    Prayer purifies us, reading instructs us. Both are good when both are possible. Otherwise, prayer is better than reading.

    If a man wants to be always in God's company, he must pray regularly and read regularly. When we pray, we talk to God; when we read, God talks to us.

    All spiritual growth comes from reading and reflection. By reading we learn what we did not know; by reflection we retain what we have learned.

    Reading the holy Scriptures confers two benefits. It trains the mind to understand them; it turns man's attention from the follies of the world and leads him to the love of God.

    The conscientious reader will be more concerned to carry out what he has read than merely to acquire knowledge of it. In reading we aim at knowing, but we must put into practice what we have learned in our course of study.

    The more you devote yourself to study of the sacred utterances, the richer will be your understanding of them, just as the more the soil is tilled, the richer the harvest.

    The man who is slow to grasp things but who really tries hard is rewarded, equally he who does not cultivate his God-given intellectual ability is condemned for despising his gifts and sinning by sloth.

    Learning unsupported by grace may get into our ears; it never reaches the heart. But when God's grace touches our innermost minds to bring understanding, his word which has been received by the ear sinks deep into the heart.

    from Book of Maxims by Saint Isidore Heresy is from the Greek word meaning 'choice'.... But we ar

  78. God Protect Us by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    Meanwhile, Bush is handing $1B to superstition societies. Because prayer research is keeping us safe, and mandatory investment by the whole population, regardless of personal superstition inclinations, has such a strong return in untaxed income.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:God Protect Us by Fritzed · · Score: 1

      I know I'm off topic, but do you have a link for that? That's one I haven't read about.

      -> Fritz

      --
      Spooooon!!!!!
    2. Re:God Protect Us by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's actually $2B, just in 2004 alone, to the superstition mills which are "faith based" according to Pope Bush's criteria. The "news" is that the top 10 states got 40% of the money, or $1B. Grants, paid with tax money, while Bush cuts "reality" based programs like education, veterans contracts, etc - and now computer science.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

  79. I'd like to see more sharing of ideas in industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Somewhere along the lines, the way the big players in the industry do things changed. The way IBM opened up the PC, there are multiple vendors now for every part of the stack from the CPU, to memory, all the way through to software. I don't know that that would happen the same way in todays industry. Further, much of the reasearch that different companies did in the 70s was shared, they published stuff and furthered the whole industry that way.


    Now it's so hyper-competitive that anything that possibly be a competitive advantage isn't shared. The extreme example would be to look at the "security" world, for the first time the number of publicly disclosed exploits and vulnerability went down last year and continued this year; not because the software is that much better but because (if you believe the hype and what people are saying) it's worth too much money to disclose them. There are companies like immunity sec that are charging money for an info (0day) sharing club. In effect, people are working against making computers more secure because they aren't willing to share information, they want to sell it. I think that the logical result is that most smaller companies aren't doing anything in the way of research or creating real IP.


    MS is spending on research, I can't say I've seen a lot of open fruit that have benefitted the whole industry. We need to find a way to return this industry to the sharing ways.

  80. Here's a sense of the scope of CS projects... by Eric+Smalley · · Score: 1

    ...funded by DARPA. A search of the TRN archive returns 235 stories from the last five years that include the word DARPA and the phrase "computer science." The same search of Google Scholar turns up 18,200 research papers.

    --
    Eric Smalley
  81. Re:-1: USians are stupid by oakgrove · · Score: 1

    Or maybe he's just a whiney bitch that needs to fuck off.

    --
    The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
  82. More bucks for the bangs by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Meanwhile, the Pentagon will be spending hugely more money on more expensive weapons. Because of all the armies poised against us, now that we've got that low-rent Cold War out of the way. Why pay for communications research during an infowar (like the TerrorWar), when we can buy missile defense systems against the departed Soviet Union?

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:More bucks for the bangs by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Moderation 0
      50% Flamebait
      50% Underrated

      Slashdotters remain divided between sensitive warmongers and informed warhaters.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    2. Re:More bucks for the bangs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a warhater, not quite that informed on the topic though.

  83. my first thought when I read the subject: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    about friggin' time they stop playing CounterStrike

  84. In other news... by bayerwerke · · Score: 1

    Carly Fiornia's latest carrer move is with DARPA.

  85. zerg by Lord+Omlette · · Score: 1

    Ok, there seem to be quite a few people saying "The U.S. is at war, get over it" and "The 'D' in DARPA stands for Defence". Did anyone even try reading the article? They specifically say that basic research funding was not reduced one iota during the Vietnam War.

    Why is the Bush Administration so intent on driving our economy into the ground?

    --
    [o]_O
  86. Makes business sense with software patents... by CustomDesigned · · Score: 1
    since they will have to pay for development twice: Once to create a new technology, and again to pay patent royalties to patent leeches that come along and patent it afterward.

    Don't tell me about prior art - it doesn't stop the USPTO from granting patents, and it doesn't help overturn them unless you spend more than the royalties on lawyers.

    I'm not sure that the actual research is changing. It's just that instead of it being public, it is being kept as military "trade secrets" (i.e. classified) so they don't have to deal with the patent leeches.

  87. ReiserFS by dduardo · · Score: 1

    What does this mean for ReiserFS? The project is currently being funded by DARPA.

  88. We should all have no deliverables by samuel4242 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I like CS professors, but there's something damned precious about someone who seems to actually believe that the government should just give him/her money without asking for any deliverable. And, if the government somehow cuts off the stream of money, they have a right to bitch about it.

    1. Re:We should all have no deliverables by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What has Prof. Deborah Estrin done after FIFTEEN years of DARPA funding, that has made our lives better, that has made it to the commercial world, that has helped with the "D" in DARPA? Why do she and other people like her feel entitled to taxpayer money from the federal government for FIFTEEN years straight? And then when DARPA asks them to actually deliver something, after FIFTEEN years, they start bitching about it! Gimme a break. To DARPA I say: send your basic money research to some poor starting assistant professor with some really good ideas, rather than people who expect you to fund them year in year out, for nothing.

    2. Re:We should all have no deliverables by davidgay · · Score: 1

      Strange. I could've sworn every single grant proposal came with deliverables. Maybe you live on a different planet than most CS professors?

    3. Re:We should all have no deliverables by samuel4242 · · Score: 1

      RTFA: The last quote spells it right out. Deliverables are just a way that Darpa is being mean to the CS community.

  89. Counterexamples by j1m+5n0w · · Score: 1
    Sensor networks have seen a lot of interesting research in recent years, as have ad-hoc wireless routing algorithms bringing us DSR and AODV. General networking and routing has advanced a lot as well. We understand congestion control much better than we did in the 80s. Peer to peer systems like chord, tapestry, and CAN are new. We understand databases much better than we did. We understand video streaming much better than we did. We know far more about cryptography than we did in the 80s. Programming languages are a bit nicer than they were.

    Just because most of the foundations of computer science have been well understood for some time doesn't mean there aren't many problems worth solving that still exist.

  90. 1rst sign of sun setting on american empire.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When you see changes in govenment funding of high-tech research like this, you can go back in history of ther super powers, for instance, this mirrors the gradual wind-down and collapse of the british empire. The british empire had the biggest high-tech navy in the early 20th century and the competitive pressures brought on by other competing super powers of the day, and the pressures of fighting the first world war was too much to sustain this empire. The first things to go when an empire is winding down, is the government funding for basic science and applied sciences (both of which are big requirements of military industrial complexes). The fact that a lot of high tech that a country needs to grow its future can only be funded by govenment (industry is too short sighted in most western countries because their profit models don't support such long term thinking). It can be seen that the asian countries (in this century) will eclipse the United State and the western world in economic growth in high-tech such as biotech, nanotech and the development of super AI's etc, all of which will have massive applications in future computer and keeping people perpetually young (ie: biotech developments in stem cell research and making of custom stem cells from scratch and nanotech). Of course, all these technologies can have military applications too (so we will find better ways of blowing eache other up (boring)). If you cut back on basic research, you lose the long-term (25 year or more) race to stay ahead of the technological curve.

  91. The Other CS by FrankTheCrazy · · Score: 1

    You can't cut Counter Strike research!

    What will I play now?

  92. There's hope by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 2, Informative

    The U.S. Navy has for a while been working under this new model: focus on short-term-beneficial research rather than the longer-term stuff. (This applies to all Naval research, not just computer science.)

    I've spoken with a sponsor in the Office of Naval Research (ONR). He said that that they're starting to realize the weakness of this approach, and expect to ramp-up longer term research investments in the next few years.

    Perhaps the same thing will happen with DARPA-funded research in a while.

  93. Hey Dick, don't forget the eBay effect... by moocat2 · · Score: 2, Funny

    I don't see how VP Cheney will allow this to happen. Without DARPA doing basic research, the Internet would not exist as we know it. And without the Internet, no eBay. And without eBay, our economy would truly be in the dumps.

  94. You have it backwards. by Paradox · · Score: 1
    While it's undeniable there are tons of people who got into compsci for the money (and subsequently had the rug pulled out from under them), and many of these people have skills sorely lacking as professionals, I think you're going a bit too far.

    In software production, oursourcing is a mistake begat by a mistake, not a solution to the slovenly state of US developers. Indeed, the US has a lot of developer talent that companies refuse to hire because, in the minds of accountants, it makes no sense to hire one expensive and skilled developer when they could hire three cheap inexperienced developers at a lower cost.

    This roots itself in the false assumption that three newbies can do the work of one skilled developer. The truth is this is almost always not the case. But projects keep failing, and accountants and managers busy themselves by missing the point and hiring more people more cheaply. I mean, the problem was they spent too much, not that they did too little.

    The assumption that high level managers love to make is that 90% of all workers are equal in their capacity for toil in the proverbial salt mines, and the other 10% should be moved into management. It's a horribly wrong and misguided assumption, but it's what's lead us to the near slave-wage practices of visa'd immigrants and the absurd situation with outsourcing (which has backfired badly). Big companies are floundering on IT work, and floudering badly.

    Meanwhile, American based Software amd Research and industry is enjoying something of a grass-roots revival. Lots of small, agile companies are popping up making focused products that no big software haus can possibly compete with. American research is more and more about the working demo than the paper (although when appropriate, the Paper is almighty).

    Even better for American research, we've got compaies doing it privately but publicly disclosing the results. Yes, Avaya, I'm looking at you and giving a big thumbs up.

    You're right though, that the destiny of the American Software Industry is at a turning point. Either we make it or break it at this point. Big companies need to make the jump to small, agile software units. Open Source and Agile Development are making big inroads in this, and these techniques are an American invention.

    At the same time, American universities are having this huge influx of foreign talent and these folks are realizing that if you're bright, now is the time to make a startup! It's like we've finally hit the point in time when the ".com bubble" should have begun to form. We have the tech now, we understand the practices. All we need to do is shake off the dogmatic policies of corporate fear and do what Americans are notorious for doing best, "Getting it done."

    --
    Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
    1. Re:You have it backwards. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bro, you'll be out of work soon...if you're not currently working, best luck in finding a job...you don't have a clue about this new world and you sure talk in a very objective way :)

  95. I, for one, am *very* happy about this. by BlueRain · · Score: 1

    all I have to say, that *its' about fucking time* someone made it a requirement to use US citizens in technology programs.

    Now maybe we can have TAs teaching American students who American undergrads can understand.

    Then we can start a virtuous cycle of having American students accomplish things, instead of having our grad schools going back to China and Pakistan whenever the mood suits them.

    American CS Professors should be *ashamed* they have not put the interests of the USA first by hiring only foreign TAs. At least whoever changed this policy will see that this will make for a stronger american workforce and stronger US citizen technology graduates.

    In a global economy, America has *got* to take care of its own. If not, we are soooo fucked, because everyone else (chinese, indian, paki, etc.) do exactly this.

    1. Re:I, for one, am *very* happy about this. by Frumious+Wombat · · Score: 1

      Maybe American students could spend a little less time hitting the gym, or majoring in Business Ed., or whatever it is they're doing instead of getting and education. I work for a moderate sized (~12K) State university, in a physical sciences department, and I went through the grad applications this year. The american students had GRE scores that were iffy in math, and no better than the foreigners in verbal. (translation: the accent may be more familiar, but they aren't any more understandable) Would I like to hire Americans? Sure, but apparently they're all under the delusion that they're going to be middle managers, rock stars, and telephone sanitizers, and aren't learning the science/math/engineering they need for advanced work. We hire the foreigners because we need a certain staffing level of a certain competence to produce enough work to get funded and retained. In Theory, we could pay engineers/scientists more, make their employment more stable, and reduce the number of aimless bureaucrats they report to, and this might lead to more qualified American students going into technical fields. In practice, we need a cultural shift where knowledge/skill is valued, and celebrity/faith-based certainty is not.

      --
      the more accurate the calculations became, the more the concepts tended to vanish into thin air. R. S. Mulliken
    2. Re:I, for one, am *very* happy about this. by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      You realize how bad foriegners cheat on the GREs don't you? Most profs I know HATE having to deal with Chinese applications because a very large majority of the Chinese cheat on their GRE and TOEFLS. But the government of China doesn't consider it cheating, they think that their students have a right to the best the US has to offer, and they get mad when the US demands to have someone competent in return. The cheating by Chinese and Indians in my school is insane, but everybody is to weak willed to do anything about it. The reason they get the best grades is they all cheat, they get answers to the homework online, they steal other people's code from the garbage can, they find copies of the tests.....

    3. Re:I, for one, am *very* happy about this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, foreigners often get these TA-type positions because they can't secure any other kind of work, while for a U.S. citizen, the job market is pretty much wide open, assuming you can find someone who wants to hire you (iffy in the current economic climate, but at least you're not legally barred from doing so). Esp. back in the dot-com era, when universities were severely stressed for staff, it made a lot of sense to use a lot of foreign TAs. PhD programs also usually have some sort of teaching requirement, so if that foreign TA isn't going to be foisted on you, he or she is going to be foisted on some other poor undergrad. It's just a fact of life, learn to live with. I got more out of my undergrad studies from books and coding (and other homework) anyway; the lectures are usually at least understandable (if sometimes boring), and discussion is usually just a rehash.

    4. Re:I, for one, am *very* happy about this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't you do it too?

  96. Software Reliability Crisis & DARPA by MOBE2001 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "I can see they are after deliverables, but the unfortunate thing is that basic research gets squeezed out in the process," said Wolfgang

    In a way, DARPA is right to cut funding to academia. Over the last forty years, scientists have made a complete mess of programming. We now have a world full of incompatible operating systems and programming languages, a veritable tower of Babel. Yet, software is as failure prone as ever. Software disaster stories are now making the evening news on a regular basis. Does academia take the blame, even partially? Don't count on it. They've invented every excuse in the book, from "there is no silver bullet" to "we don't have enough funding." It's sickening.

    I say, unless the computer science community gets off its spoiled collective ass and comes up with a solution to the software reliability problem, it deserves to get its funding decreased. Drastically.

  97. machine learning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The whole field of machine learning (which includes data mining, bioinformatics, pattern recognition, and some parts of computer vision) has made HUUUUGE progress in the last few years. Without this, we wouldn't have spam filters, OCR, automatic check readers and zip code readers, DNA microarray analysis, Google (some of it anyway), the list goes on and on.

  98. [OT] Re:zerg by Lord+Omlette · · Score: 1
    "The 'D' in DARPA stands for Defence"
    No it doesn't, at least not in the USA. :-)
    One day, secret underground cells of Esperanto speakers will rise up, and all English (US) and English (UK) speakers will be forced to do something.

    I haven't quite figured out what that something is, but I'm sure someone will come up w/ something.
    --
    [o]_O
  99. you don't know what research is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You clearly have no idea what long-term research is. Gnutella is not research. It's innovation, but not research. We don't need much government funding for innovation, but we need it for basic research. DARPA does not do the research themselves, until recently, they funded universities to do the research. Now they mostly fund companies to do short-term research and development.

    NSF funds research in computer science (and many other fields), but their budget is going down too.
    When a university research group submits a proposal to the NSF, the chances of it getting funded are less than 10%.

    Without NSF or DARPA grant money, there is no money for PhD students. Without PhD students, there is no research.

    1. Re:you don't know what research is by johnny+cashed · · Score: 1
      Without NSF or DARPA grant money, there is no money for PhD students. Without PhD students, there is no research.
      Yes, and corporations don't do any research? I work with PhD's. And PhD students. Smart people, most of them. But they are not the only people who do research.
  100. Oh come on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    CS research is bullshit now. There's research and then there is invention. Somebody got the idea for the internet and started creating it, they didn't "research" into the internet.

  101. Behold the zealot rush by tbo · · Score: 2, Funny

    I'd always try to get Protoss carriers as fast as possible, but usually I got wiped out first by a zealot rush. Maybe your analogy is more apt than you realize.

  102. Red Herring by cookie_cutter · · Score: 1
    I'm not saying that open ended scientific research isn't important, I'm a firm believer in such research's need, but is the US military really the best organization to decide on how to direct it?

    Consider that, even when the pentagon is funding open ended research, the deciders on how to grant the funding, in the back of their minds, know that they work for the military, and will act accordingly, however subconscious their motivations may be.

    It would seem to be a lot more sensible to have an organization with broader goals to decide on how to fund open ended science.

  103. Nothing new by macroslash · · Score: 1

    This really isn't anything new. The ARPA/DARPA that created ARPAnet and a lot of the early advances in computing hasn't really existed since the mid to late 70's. At that point the there was a demand that projects return usable results within 2-3yrs. I don't know what it has been like for the last 20yrs, but unless there was a change towards more openended research I don't see how this is much different.

  104. lies, damn lies, and statistics by johnny+cashed · · Score: 1

    Yes, I did a cursory look at the search results in google scholar. Just because it has the acronym DARPA in it with the phrase "computer science" doesn't mean it was DARPA funded research. Therefore your claim of 18,200 research papers is not an accurate count of DARPA funded research papers. Unless you count my using the internet in research as being "DARPA funded" because I used something [the internet] that DARPA research funds helped develop.

  105. Re:My question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    There is far more killing of innocents going on in Sudan right now than there possibly ever was in Iraq, but we're not going to stop it because we've made a mess in Iraq that needs fixing.

    Hell, there's far more killing of innocents going on in Iraq right now than there was in Iraq when Bush went in, and that's not counting the insurgents.
  106. Blame it on Iraq (partially) by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1, Insightful

    A *huge* fraction of U.S. DoD money has been diverted from research to fund the war in Iraq.

    It's possible that, once we manage to lose the cowboy mentality, the longer-term research will resume.

    Don't underestimate the cost of the war in Iraq on the DoD's normal operations.

    1. Re:Blame it on Iraq (partially) by sexylicious · · Score: 1

      Yeah. They're talking about billions of dollars. Entire programs are being scaled back. :(

  107. Computer science no longer research driven by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 1

    Very little has come out of comp. science research in universities and research institutes in the last few years. The cutting edge is being driven by consumer goods.

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
  108. DARPA understands Science... by copdk4 · · Score: 1

    Computer Science is just another science like Maths and Physics. In Science, researchers try to discover *generalizations* and *laws* that are like *ultimate truth* by means of experimentation and validation. Maths and Physics have discovered those *laws* and hence people are now more interested in applying them to different fields e.g. biophysics, nanotech etc. similary basic research in CS has peaked the moores law and hence researchers need to focus more on the applications like Bioinformatics, GIS etc Darpa has made a timely move to focus more on application of the technology rather than invest further on basic science which infact is the job of NSF like agencies.

  109. Military Research Solves the Wrong Problems by billstewart · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Government-funded research almost always works on the wrong problems - it's inherently working on problems the government wants solved, rather than on problems that Real People want solved. This not only takes tax money out of citizens' pockets, which they would have spent on things they wanted instead of things the government wants, but it also has the far worse effect that it takes bright researchers who could have been working on problems that the real world wanted solved and directs them toward problems that the government wants solved - partly the military, partly the military-industrial complex that feeds off the military, and in general toward directions that support big centralized businesses that support big governments.

    We do occasionally get good things out of it, and it does let bright people develop ideas and technologies that have broader uses, but mostly it develops better and better technology for killing people. Sure, we've gotten communications satellites, and the Internet does things that UUCP-net didn't do. But there's a huge amount of solar energy research that simply didn't get done because the college kids who were good at thermodynamics went to work developing aerospace technology instead. And while that aerospace technology has civilian applications, much more of it is for jumbo jets than for small private aircraft and free-flight navigation that would make air travel more practical and decentralized. (I *still* want my flying car :-)

    Some of the agricultural research has been seriously useful. But too much of it has been directed in ways that support big agribusiness quasi-industrial farms instead of family farms, and towards pesticides that enable mass production, toward genetically modifying plants to make them more resistant to pesticides so that they're more practical for pesticide-based farming, and towards monocultures rather than increased diversity. And if you thought software patents were nasty, you should go look at the biological patent explosions of the last 20-30 years.

    Medical research seems like it wouldn't have this problem, and while it's nowhere near as bad, it's still a mixed bag. Most medical techniques that are useful on battlefields are useful on other trauma, and more Americans are still killed every year by the side-effects of the War on Drugs than the wars for oil, and far more by car accidents than either one. But government-funded medical research has unfortunate interactions with the FDA's regulation of new drug development - the regulatory barriers make it economically difficult to develop drugs that have less than a billion-dollar market, and the government funding tends to encourage large labs, and make up for some of the regulatory problems by funding universities which can avoid the regulatory barriers rather than fixing the regulatory barriers.

    Short-term military-focused research is far more of an interference to the evolution of our economy than long-term mixed-use research. But they're both bad.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  110. Revolutionizing warfare, my ass... by johnny+cashed · · Score: 1

    Do we have control outside the "green zone" yet? As Rumsfeld said, we are spending billions, while they (terrorists) are spending millions. Read up on 4th generation warfare. Then tell me we are revolutionizing warfare. At least from a cost to performance ratio. "Machines don't fight wars, people do, and they use their minds." -Col John R. Boyd

  111. SDI / Star Wars had a lot to do with that by billstewart · · Score: 1

    A lot of that research came out of the Strategic Computing Initiative that was part of the Reagan administration's Strategic Defense Initiative (aka Star Wars.) Mainframes and PCs could be funded quite adequately by the private sector (though some fraction of that was selling mainframes or mainframe-based services to government bureaucracies as well as to the real world). But developing speculative weird architectures is much harder to get funded in the real world, and SDI needed immense amounts of computing capability to solve control problems and image processing as well as to deal with the fact that efficient targeting turned out to be an NP-hard problem.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  112. Penny wise, pound foolish by alispguru · · Score: 2, Informative
    Someone at DARPA has forgotten that DOD AI research has been worth every penny spent on it. Very little of it turned directly into military applications, but the stuff that did was spectacularly successful. Look here (emphasis added):

    AI systems proved their strategic value in support of operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm. For example, DART (Dynamic Analysis and Replanning Tool) solved the logistical nightmare of moving the U.S. military assets to the Saudi Desert. The application was developed to schedule the transportation of all U.S. personnel and materials such as vehicles, food, and ammunition from Europe to Saudi Arabia. This one application alone reportedly more than offset all the money the Advanced Research Projects Agency had funneled into AI research in the last 30 years.
    --

    To a Lisp hacker, XML is S-expressions in drag.
  113. Applying statistics to our own field :-) by billstewart · · Score: 1
    It probably says lots of things about our schools, actually. But yes, statistically, more than 70% of the people in the world are not from the US (in fact, there are more educated English-speaking Indians than there are Americans of any educational level.) Another factor that's also relevant here is that the students who aren't very good usually aren't going abroad to study - we're mainly getting the cream of the crop.

    That's not entirely true, because we're also mostly getting the wealthier students from other countries, so there are very bright students from around the world who can't afford to come to the US to study - but the wealthier students could usually afford a better-than-average education before they get to grad school as well, so that helps increase their quality.

    Of course, there's the question of why so many of the best schools are in the US; there are also outstanding schools in England and continental Europe (and in lots of other places, but American snobbery mostly doesn't recognize them :-), and an Oxford or Cambridge education is still just as good and just as high a reputation even though the American empire has mostly supplanted the British empire, and I assume that the Sorbonne is still as good now as when my grandfather went there. I suspect a lot of it is not just the quality of the school, but the relevance to the modern economy, and people around the world are following the money just as people around the US do (and until recently, it was here.) And universities are self-reinforcing institutions - if you've got a lot of good people there, that tends to improve the quality of the education, and the reputation of the school, so more good people get there, and the university gets to keep the best of them, increasing the extent to which that improves the quality of the education...

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  114. Japan has systematic failures too. by billstewart · · Score: 1
    Dude, the Japanese economic crash was far deeper and more systematic than "a few problems with banking". They haven't really recovered yet.

    And most of the "great scientific advancement" coming out of the Japanese MITI bureaucracies funding their research institutions and Fifth Generation Computing project has turned out to have been better Public Relations than actual science. You haven't seen them take back the computer industry. All that Artificial Intelligence research has been pretty much fruitless (though AI suffers from the problem that any time anybody there develops something actually useful, everybody says "that's not Really AI, that's just {pattern matching, text-to-speech, etc.}") and probably more useful AI-like research has been developed to make kick-ass games than for any practical applications.

    That's not to say that the US isn't in deep deep economic trouble, because it is. Don't just blame us boomers for hanging out and having too few kids, though - if you want to blame boomers, blame the Bush Administration for running up huge debts they won't be in office to have to pay back, and for putting out bogus statistics about Social Security (which *is* bankrupt, and would be helped radically by private investment, just not the way the Bush League is proposing, and which will be cutting back benefits radically just about the time I would have been retiring, except that my pension will also be cutting back radically if it still exists at all.) The right solution for Social Security's problems starts with not only doing honest statistics, but also with not running up rabidly increasing debt.

    The Clinton Administration got away with their economic difficulties partly by having a major economic boom underneath them, and partly by refinancing the US's long-term high-interest debt with short-term low-interest debt, and partly by having a Congress that was a different political party that shot down all the expensive new stuff they *wanted* to do. The Bush Administration hasn't had any of those advantages, so they've been able to irresponsibly drag us deeper into debt.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
    1. Re:Japan has systematic failures too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All that Artificial Intelligence research has been pretty much fruitless

      I do not understand your statement. The Japanese has been very prolific in publications in AI, in both the theoretical and the pragmatic. (I believe they have their own struggles between these two schools.)

      (though AI suffers from the problem that any time anybody there develops something actually useful, everybody says "that's not Really AI, that's just {pattern matching, text-to-speech, etc.}")

      Please be more precise. As far as CS is concerned, "Patterns Are Everywhere". AI is not into how awareness emerges, which is the study of the philosophical school. AI, in its purest form, is about logic and induction --- and we see lots of patterns there.

      probably more useful AI-like research has been developed to make kick-ass games than for any practical applications.

      I think the average Japanese professor will frawn upon students who are thinking of a research into "kick-ass games".

  115. Re:Rome or Bible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Greece produced a wealth of culture. From Plato and Aristotle's philosophy on governments we derive our idea of the republic, where every individual's rights are important, and democracy, where the people rule."

    Rome was a republic before the decadance of the imperial pagan Rome came into being.

    Also, the Holy Bible has played a far more important role in rights and government in western civilization then greece, being found in everything from the founding of common law (Alfred the Great put the ten commandments in his common law document) to the Declaration of Independence (We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.) Note, that the Declaration proclaims it is self evident that their Creator.. - The greeks held a panthestic warring disorderly gods idea, which surely affected their viewpoint, nor where all the greek cities democratic.

    The Holy Bible, at least the old testament, is older, and contains a lot of fundamentally good advice on good goverment. The people of early Israel governed themselves. God even gave them some advice on not getting a king like the people around them. 1 Samual 8 (read this).
    http://bible.crosswalk.com/OnlineStudyBible/bible. cgi?passage=1sa+8&version=str&showtools=0

    Something else to keep in mind: a "lot" is a method of electing people. "Ballot" comes from "ball lot". People use to write the names of the people they wanted to elect on stone, or pottery, which is where the name comes from. This same use is in the Holy Bible, although a lot of purposely bad commentaries would have you believe lot means a random dice throw, or try to hide it in some way (something akin to not having elections in some churches I believe, in contrast to the way the church of the apostles did it).

  116. Shifting Risk from Feds to Contractors by billstewart · · Score: 1
    I worked for the military-industrial complex back in the 80s (but I've rehabilitated myself, thank you :-)

    Cost-Plus was a great scam, but one thing it did was meant that the government could engage in technically risky projects developing things that nobody in the world really knew how to develop, because they were basically taking all the risk, so they could get people to work on them. During the 80s, especially the late 80s and especially after Gramm-Rudman, when the government was being pushed towards being "fiscally responsible" or at least accountable, what happened was that they tried to push most of the risk onto contractors. The old system meant that the 80-20 rule usually got you the 80% that was useful, and part of the 20% of speculative stuff, so you'd end up with 85-90% of the original objectives, and kill it off at 100-120% of the cost, and sometimes you could do something useful with the speculative stuff as well. Under the new regime, contractors couldn't really risk that - they were tending to be forced into fixed-cost bids for things when that 20% of ill-defined requirements didn't have a fixed scope or workload or success probability, so they had to either refuse to work on things, or get very aggressive about negotiating scope and finding other ways to extract money out of it, but it was tough to do anything creative - things became excessively bureaucratic.

    Another problem was that the Feds, especially the DoD, kept increasing the number of mandatory features without realizing the speculatory nature of them. So it wasn't just fault-tolerant OR cryptographically secure - it was fault-tolerant AND cryptographically secure AND GOSIP-compliant (the OSI protocol stack stuff) AND B1-secure (even though the researchers only barely knew how to do B1 or B2 Orange Book Security, and requiring GOSIP meant you were in Red Book territory) AND written in Ada, of course, AND POSIX-compliant, including the new real-time POSIX features that weren't solidified yet. And it had to be Commercial Off-The-Shelf (COTS) equipment, because that was how you contained costs and prevented businesses from making the Feds pay for all their new speculative development work. While I ran into the worst excesses of that tendency with NASA projects, it was almost as bad for the FAA and the Treasury Department (on desktop-PC-plus-server bids) and even State Department communication networks.

    The FAA also tended to require that everything be compatible with every other piece of equipment the FAA had ever deployed, whether than equipment was documented or not or even had cable connectors that anybody made any more, much less knew the protocols for, and they needed far more nines worth of reliability than anything in the commercial world, because if airplanes crash into each other, it's their ass politically. I worked on one FAA project where my company was a subcontractor to the bidders who were the lucky ones that lost - IBM were the poor bastards who won, and burned through billions of their own dollars as well as the FAA's before the project got canned years later.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  117. Re:Rome or Bible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I pasted the part about Samual listing all the bad things a king would do, and the people insisting on having one. It seems funny. But sadly, that is what they did, and people still do things exactly like it. "Because everyone else has it that way".

    8:11 And he said, This will be the manner of the king that shall reign over you: He will take your sons, and appoint them for himself, for his chariots, and to be his horsemen; and some shall run before his chariots. 8:12 And he will appoint him captains over thousands, and captains over fifties; and will set them to ear his ground, and to reap his harvest, and to make his instruments of war, and instruments of his chariots. 8:13 And he will take your daughters to be confectionaries, and to be cooks, and to be bakers. 8:14 And he will take your fields, and your vineyards, and your oliveyards, even the best of them, and give them to his servants. 8:15 And he will take the tenth of your seed, and of your vineyards, and give to his officers, and to his servants. 8:16 And he will take your menservants, and your maidservants, and your goodliest young men, and your asses, and put them to his work.
    8:17 He will take the tenth of your sheep: and ye shall be his servants. 8:18 And ye shall cry out in that day because of your king which ye shall have chosen you; and the LORD will not hear you in that day.

    8:19 Nevertheless the people refused to obey the voice of Samuel; and they said, Nay; but we will have a king over us; 8:20 That we also may be like all the nations.

  118. Just outsource the work to India by geekee · · Score: 2, Funny

    If we just outsource the work to India, the budget cuts can be absorbed without loss in productivity.

    --
    Vote for Pedro
  119. Re:My question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...for the poorer class of America to go fight for what you deem important.

    Not to nitpick but anyways-
    Why does this myth of the military being "lower class" perpetuate on /.? Unless you call middle class "lower class", as a demographic the military is a microcosm of the US and is mostly middle class.

  120. Who really knows? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It could be as you say, but personally, I don't think there's any way to tell if the research is going to stop or not, since the results are going to remain under the dark blanket of secrecy.

    Rather than continuing to give away secrets like the Internet to the rest of the world (including "the bad guys"), they seem to have decided to keep those secrets from release for a longer time.

    The trouble with doing stuff in secret is that you risk not getting the sort of criticism, embarrassing or otherwise, that tells you if an idea to add more TLDs isn't necessarily the earthshattering one, or that putting something like the TIA in the hands of politicians is like leaving a band of drug-induced paranoid monkeys in the control room of an aircraft carrier.

    Of course industry doesn't like this: it was a source of free IP for them. Now they will have to hire more than just lawyers to develop their own (unless they want to continue to only pretend that they have patent-worthy stuff...). Actually, it probably took amazing political courage to make this step, considering the pressure from lobbies.

  121. "necessary" is the wrong critereon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The US already has the most advanced military and by far the largest military spending. Why is such an increase in military research nececessary at this point in time?


    "necessary" is a deliberately ambiguous term designed to give you the ability to respond by raising the ambiguity of any response in rebuttal. It can be used for any argument, such as "why is it necessary to prevent starvation?"
    In the case of military researh, someone will say, "it has a reasonable chance of producing results that will reduce our casualties and perhaps even the other sides' casualities", and you will be able to respond "yes, but it is that really necessary? Couldn't we just let Saddam's secret police continue to cut out the tongues of dissidents in ambulances, or couldn't we just let some totalitarian adversary replace the current US government with it's desired form of government?" The answer, of course is "yes", we could allow those things, so, technically, military research is "unnecessary", as is anything else in the world.


    A more useful question for decision making would probably be "are the owners of this money (i.e., the US citizenry) better off spending it this way or in some other way (say, by lowering taxes)." Then you have a more objective analysis by arguing about likely outcomes, estimating their probabilities and comparing them.

  122. Hierarchical routing vs hierarchical addressing by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    There is no particular reason you have to put structure in the address in order to have hierarchical routing.

    You can run with the equivalent of name servers that tell you the current best (QOS) routes given a particular system address.

    The big failure of the DARPA guys was to presume that the hardware capabilities of the routers they were running with during the early days of IP was not going to scale along with the network. It did but by then we were stuck with their god-damned network class structures.

  123. Let's be realistic..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ......Even the US military has finite budgets. The cost of burning a city down with conventional weapons is large but not infinite.

  124. Yay - no more algorithms for blood! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that's it, that's all I have to say.

  125. KSM planned both WTC I and WTC II attacks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Khalid Sheik Mohammed planned the first WTC attack from Iraq, which also happens to be where the bombers who escaped from the US fled to.

    Khalid Sheik Mohammed also planned the second WTC attack. Those of 9/11.

    Hmm. The first WTC attack was planned from Iraq, and by the same guys who planned the second one of 9/11, even though the second attack wasn't actually planned from Iraq. And there's that Salman Pak place where small teams with small knives were trained to hijack airliners. Also in Iraq.

    I think even you are smart enough to figure these connections out.

  126. I'm sooooo outraged. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not really. Given that a lot of CS researchers spend lots of time wringing their hands over R&D that could be used by the armed forces and the chicken-little predictions of Internet-launched terrorist attacks. New and better software technology, from encryption to 3-D rendering, benefits everybody, not just the military. Given that money is tight in Washington --tighter than anyone would like to admit--the military ought to spend its money on stuff that's directly related to its mission of killing bad people and breaking their stuff. That means weapons, materiel, soldier salaries, etc. R&D can give the U.S. a strategic advantage over the bad guys, but often it just amounts to corporate welfare (quite like NASA in that respect). If CEOs are stupid enough to end all CS research as well, they'll pay for it later on, and it won't be just the guys and gals in uniform who suffer as a result.

  127. Google? Akamai? by Dire+Bonobo · · Score: 2, Informative
    > Very little has come out of comp. science research in universities and research institutes in the last few years.

    How about Google and Akamai? Both were---to the extent of my knowledge---basic research that turned out to be immensely useful. Both are now woven deeply into the fabric of the internet---I'm pretty sure you've used both today---and neither is all that old.

    That you don't know about research results doesn't mean they're not there.

  128. Cutting CS research? by lampajoo · · Score: 1

    Where will new innovations like riot shields and the galil come from?

  129. Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Total tangent here

    Should've trusted you when you said that. Totally irrelevant. Precious time wasted. Consider writing sitcoms.

    1. Re:Wow by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      Should've trusted you when you said that. Totally irrelevant. Precious time wasted. Consider writing sitcoms.

      You committed yourself to wasting precious time when you came to /. in the first place, man. Besides, it wasn't irrelevant, only TANGENTIAL. Hughes Missile Systems was almost totally DoD/DARPA funded, so that story could perhaps be construed as anecdotal rebuttal to the contention that universities waste more DoD money than corps do. Besides, isn't the amusement value of the mental image of a building full of angry 1970's engineers with black-framed glasses, wide ties, and sideburns, standing on chairs hanging paper and cardboard contraptions from air vents worth the "precious time" you spent?

      Now this post does indeed constitute a totally irrelevant waste of precious time.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
  130. Al Gore by kisak · · Score: 1

    Getting funding for the breakthrough research that created among other things the internet, is exactly what Gore (somewhat clumsy) pointed out that he had done while in Congress. Funny ironi that the present government is now "lead" by the the guy who seemed to make his whole election campaign back in 2000 on misrepresenting Gore's remark, and that this government lacks the vision of Al Gore to continue to fund this important research.

    --

    --- guns don't kill people, people with guns kill people ---

  131. Re:Stop your Whining. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey everyone knows that hefty tax breaks for the wealthy and for corporations are far more essential for our national security than is leading edge computer research.

    Stop your whining. Yours is not to question why, yours is but to pay and die.

    Its about time America accept reality and discard quaint, outdated notions of justice, fairness, and Christianity and accept Republicanism, our new way of life.

  132. Re:My $500 hammer arrived on time! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The $10,000 toilet seat and my $500 hammer did arrive via fed-ex same day air, so I would have to say yes, your absolutely right.

    We need far more defence contractors and far fewer whiners. Yours is not to question why, yours is but to pay and die.

    Vote Republican. They don't raise your taxes, just your prices.

  133. Re: Destroy Universities and Liberal Bastions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By removing DARPA funding we can begin to destroy the financial health of Universities. This will bring them to their knees and thereby force the firing of liberal faculty. This in turn will reduce the number for foreigners invading our country, thereby helping to keep terrorists out. They will be unable to use university computers to broadcast their email because they will become to scarce and antiquated to use.

    By destroying higher US education, we can weaken the left and I can keep my taxes low. All those "brilliant", "rich" foreigners can go somewhere else for their education. Its about time to pass the burden of leadership on to others anyway, we simply have to recognize that, like for social security, medicare, we can no longer afford it. That money is needed for additional tax breaks and in Iraq, where democracy must be preserved.

  134. how-dare-they-take-away-the-free-money by waffleman · · Score: 1

    Indeed? Seriously timothy, shame on you. Science is important as a basic part of our culture. Not for us to accomplish goals, but to make a life with rigorous and joyous curiosity more worth living. Steps like this simply devalue our culture and quality of life. Whether this event is cause or effect in the devaluation doesn't really matter, it's part of a cycle that bodes poorly for all of us.

  135. I know him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    he'll outhack you any day, junior.

  136. EVERY office is cutting budgets... by sexylicious · · Score: 1

    because of the war.

    And there's a push, it seems, from the highest levels to really trim everything.

  137. *Defense* Advanced Research Projects Agency by BoneFlower · · Score: 1

    They are part of the Deparement of Defense, their primary mission, as is the primary mission of all other parts of the DoD, is to provide for the national security of the United States via military operations, or the support thereof.

    Cutting back other things to focus on the primary mission is exactly what they should do.

    If you are going to criticize this move, criticize it based on the DARPA mission. If you think the extra stuff they did was important enough to be funded by the feds, contact your congresscritters and tell them you think an agency should be stood up to fund such research.