I understand the sentiment. Phone companies sometimes act like jerks. In this case, they are lying by using the word "unlimited". Data transfer is ALWAYS limited,on any media.
Mbps is a measure of speed, though. Technically, looking at how very large networks work, "up to 30 Mbps" is more like saying a Porsche can go "up to 150 MPH".
It's important information for consumers, too. I want to know how quickly my cat video will load - will I have to wait while it buffers? That's actually a completely separate measurement from how many cat videos I can download in a month. Unless of course you assume I'm downloading videos 24/7. I buy bandwidth that way - 24 / 7 dedicated bandwidth. It's VERY A expensive that way because you're not sharing the cost since you're not sharing the bandwidth.
In the long run, yes decreased cost results in decreased prices TO THE EXTENT THAT COMPETITION IS ALLOWED. If, say Cricket wireless can provide the same service at half the cost, they'll charge less in order to get market share. On the macro level, it puts downward pressure on prices.
Here's a concrete example for you. In the web hosting business, like many others, 20% of the customers result in 80% of the cost. Most customers never require much attention, the servers just run, the bill goes out, and their credit card is charged. A few customers run opt-in mailing lists, and while those are legitimate, they cause some spam complaints that needed to be handled, they need DKIM set up, etc. Other customers feel they need to install a new script every week, so they need a lot of support, and since they do everything ad-hoc rather than settling into a pattern they miss paying their bull sometimes and you have to call them a couple of times to get them to pay. Many years ago, I started a very small invitation-only web hosting service. We only hostprofessional webmasters who know what they are doing, so they don't bug support with stupid questions. Their invoice is billed to their business credit card every month. I have customers I haven't heard from in years. Because of this, our costs are low, and so are our prices. We can provide excellent service at an excellent price because we're not spending our time and money dealing with spam and DMCA complaints, or chasing down past-due accounts. Our costs are low, therefore our prices are low.
* no, we won't host your site. Not unless we know you, or people we know vouch for you. We don't want new customers unless we know those new customers won't bring DMCA, spam, billing, or support problems.
I know it's not fashionable to read the article, but you didn't even read the title? This is about wireless. I pointed out that the platform of the Green party is to give the FCC new powers to do a, b, c, and d. Which in effect means giving Wheeler those powers. What does that have to do with the price of tea in China? Or in your case, milk in China.
If you for some reason want to make a comparison between the US and China on the topic of "big government", you might notice that China isn't exactly an example of small government. In China, the milk producers report directly to the government bureaucrats, more or less exactly what the Greens want to do here. Yes, that system results in melamine in milk.
Here's what you're missing. The article is about what happens when a tower hits maximum capacity for a moment. Suppose the hardware on the tower is capable of serving 1,000 people per second*. There are 1,050 people who want to download this second. Sorry, 50 people are going to have to wait one second. The tower can only handle 1,000. That's just a fact. They aren't "messing with" anything, that's just what the hardware is capable of.
What Verizon has decided is that when there is an overload and somebody will have to wait a second, it'll be the heaviest users who have to wait. After all, they've already used "more than their fair share".
* it's actually how many packets and bytes the tower can serve per second / millisecond, not customer count. The person who uses a lot will wait milliseconds.
Your entire post is basically repeating the same failure of logic over and over. They don't put up a new tower for one customer, true. However, 1,000 customers like you mean that 10 more towers hit capacity and ten more need to be added. Verizon isn't making decisions one customer at a time. If they lost a many of their 150 GB / month customers, they could provide better service for a lot more 15GB / month customers and make a lot more money. That would be a good thing for them.
> Find the towers that sometimes saturate and then...
Too late. TFA is about what happens while the tower is saturated, how they divide the available bandwidth between the customers WHEN IT'S SATURATED. Once that has already occurred, it's too late to go back and do analysis and not do what they are doing. They do in fact add towers as you suggest, but this story is about what happens when the tower first becomes overloaded. The overload has to be handled somehow immediately, while it's occurring.
I don't think the CONCEPT of government is itself bad. I do think that in this post-Constitutional era of the NSA, the Patriot Act, etc., giving more power to THIS government is foolish. Quite foolish, actually.
Note that when you wanted a good example of this government doing something that was clearly good, you had to go all the way back to Lincoln for examples. More Lincoln might be good. More Bush, or more Obama?
AFTER you fix it so that extraordinarily people are in power, giving them even more powers might make sense. Giving more power to this administration, or to President Chris Christie in a few years, or President Jeb Bush doesn't seem prudent.
> How many people does it really take to draw up a few rules for an industry?
Just one, Wheeler in this case. We agree their platform calls for the FCC to have more control, right? We agree that the FCC is run by Wheeler, a career cable company lobbyist, right? They want to give him more power, he's a cable-industry lobbyist. Do we disagree so far? That means they want to give more power to a cable lobbyist. Seems pretty simple and clear to me.
Of course, they also WANT Wheeler to be a good guy and to act in the public interest. The fact is, he doesn't. Bureaucrats and politicians are self-serving. Wanting them to be saints doesn't make them saints. Pretending that they'll stop being that way if we just give them more power is foolish.
few examples of the federal government creating more liberty: * abolishment of slavery (Civil War will give you a lot of fun arguing points, I'm sure, but still true)
Fugitive slave act.
* abolishment of Jim Crow laws
Abolishment of regulation = more liberty, yes
* child labor laws
1 point
* Roe v Wade (trollbait, but millions of Americans have been grateful for this liberty)
Troll bait indeed. Freedom to live vs freedom to kill. Going into that won't move this discussion forward.
* hopefully someday, breaking cable's blockade of good internet
It's government that enforces the cable monopolies. They are called franchises, and it's the government saying only one company can run service to a given neighborhood. An EXCELLENT example of government doing harm.
For the same price, NASA could have SpaceX build and launch ten rockets. Alternatively, they could spend the same money to have SpaceX build ten rockets, then throw nine away and launch one.
That's what they've done, spent resources that can build ten rockets and ending up with one. That's PRECISELY equal to building ten rockets, then destroying nine of them.
Alternatively, they could have paid SpaceX to build the one rocket, then burned a few billion dollars in cash. They'd end up in the exact same position - billions of dollars gone, and one new rocket. It ends up precisely the same as just burning the cash.
For the same price, NASA could have SpaceX build and launch ten rockets. That would be ten times as many scientific experiments launched or whatever good thing the rocket is doing. Alternatively, they could spend the same money to have SpaceX build ten rockets, then throw nine away and launch one. That's virtually exactly the same as what they're doing - taking billions of dollars from taxpayers and ending up with one rocket. It ends up exactly the same as throwing away nine rockets, removing from the economy whatever value those nine rockets have.
They could also spend the same amount of money having SpaceX build one rocket, then spending a few billion dollars sending kids to college. So, for the same price you can have either a) one rocket built by NASA or b) one rocket built by SpaceX plus provide a college education for a thousand people. So what's the difference between those two? Both add a rocket to the economy. The difference is whether people get a college education or not. Which do you think is better for the economy, college graduates earning good money, or those same people flipping burgers? Waste REMOVES value from the economy.
Sure there are reasons that our methods have changed, of course. That's just not really related to the point I was making. TFS claims that the military is trying to find ways to kill more people, and that's simply the opposite of the truth. They've been working on ways to only blow up a specific room rather than blowing up a building or a city block. Secondly, IF they wanted to kill lots of people, they wouldn't need need to work on methods to do so. They've had the B-52 for 60 years or so. A single B-52 could kill thousands of people per day if you wanted it to. We COULD have wiped out Iraq in about a day and half. Building a democracy in Iraq is much, much more difficult than killing them would be.
I'm quoting their official platform. Are you saying that they're lying about what policies they advocate?
Their official platform has a list of new and expanded powers they want the FCC to have. That's their official platform. They just haven't thought through the fact that the FCC is run by cable industry lobbyist Tom Wheeler, so new powers for the FCC IS new powers for a top cable lobbyist.
I'll give you a thousand dollars if you can get a current copy of MS Word to read old MS Word documents, like OpenOffice can. Since Microsoft can't pull that off, I'm guessing you won't either. I suppose you could shellExecute(OpenOffice.exe) from a Word macro.:)
So yeah, you COULD throw out all your company's documents in order to avoid having two "power users" of Word learn different menu locations for a few things. That would make sense, if you had Balmer's dick in your mouth.
>> In its latest bid to kill more people, more efficiently, and at less cost
> Isn't this what we want all government agencies to strive for? When the military's actual job is to figure out how to kill people and destroy things with maximum effectiveness
In WWII the US military wanted to kill more people, more efficiently. They were pretty good at it. Since then, it seems the challenge has been to find ways to kill the FEWEST possible number of people, while achieving a strategic goal. We tried to win the hearts and minds of Iraqis. Germans - we just blew them up.
Greed and a whole lot of stupid. Sprint has two brands for the same company, Sprint brand and Boost. Boost is $35. Sprint is $85 or whatever with a "free" $150 phone. People have the choice, and they choose to pay an extra $50 / month for 36 months = $1,800 for that phone. Not just uneducated people either. I bet someone will get all defensive and reply to this post with justifications of why it's not stupid of them to pay $1,800 for a $150 phone, and that person is a Slashdot user - probably a computer programmer or something.
When so many people choose to pay ten times as much as the phone is worth, it's no surprise someone will sell it to them.
If you're not financing the phone via Verizon, you have no need to pay Verizon anything. Instead you just use one of their subsidiary brands or affiliate for about $35 / month.
I don't remember the current names for Verizon, but as an example Sprint and Boost are the same company, same LTE network Boost is $35 / month. You'd only pay the Sprint contract price if you were paying off your "free" phone.
> or you're functionality is limited, or the feature plain sucks
Our experience is the cost of limited functionality in off-the-shelf software is a significantly higher cost than the license cost. With the old proprietary system, an employee would spend 4 hours each Friday copying and pasting from one program to another. With the new modular open source software, I spent an hour authoring a module to completely automate the data transfer, and have it happen in real time.
For just that one little function alone, this year we saved 4 hours X 52 weeks X ~$40/hr = $8,320 per year. I do one of those every week. A little change to the software for a big change in the process. I'd be surprised if we haven't saved at least $1 million / year total, from all the little tweaks, correction, and additions we've done to the open source software to make our process better, faster, more efficient, and more accurate. I know the P/L from the from the program using the open source stuff sure has improved, but it's hard to quantify how much of that is due to the software. I could easily prove it's saved at least as much as my salary though, and my salary was being paid when we had the proprietary software too, for a specialist who was paid to admin the system and figure out hacks to get the proprietary system to almost meet our needs using duct tape and bubble gum.
Let's try this one more time, because clearly you missed the entire point. I'm familiar with their platform, and with the actual effects of the policies they advocate, which are frequently the opposite of their stated goals. Let me copy / paste the thesis from my post again since you seem to have missed reading it the first time:
> so while it's not their intent, their policy proposals actually strongly favor the large established corporations by their effects.
To avoid to much redundancy, I'm going to stick to just the first half of their platform to show a dozen or so of their policy proposals. Te second half is more of the same, and a dozen is enough to see the pattern. Their platform includes the following position statements:
citizens are the government [this is their key mistake that makes their policies go against their intentions]. ownership and control of the electromagnetic spectrum to the public [government]. federally funded childcare Livable Income [federal government pays everyone] [expand social security] [Federal] Civilian Conservation Corps End the privatization of broadcast frequencies [government-controlled media] Tax electronic advertising to fund democratic [government] media outlets. require that holders of broadcast licenses present controversial issues of public importance in an equitable and balanced manner [whatever the current administration considers "balanced"] revoke licenses from outlets that fail to satisfy these obligations. Governmental (PEG) Access Television generous public [government] funding for Public Broadcasting System (PBS) television and National Public Radio (NPR)
It's pretty clear, isn't it, that they are for more government - WAY more government. In fact, the preamble of their platform says they seek to refute the idea "that government is intrinsically undesirable and destructive of liberty". They think more federal government leads to more liberty. How cute.
The fact, and this point isn't really arguable, is that the federal government is largely controlled by large corporate interests. That's simply what is. The greens want a lot more federal government control of people. The corps control the government. Therefore, the policy proposals of the greens would in fact mean more corporate control by way of their assistants, the politicians. The greens don't WANT more corporate control, but they want more government control, and don't seem to realize it's precisely the same thing. It's the same people running the corporations and the government, as we've seen this week with the chairman of the FCC / president of the National Cable Television Association, Tom Wheeler.
When Greens say "the FCC should have more power and do more", that means the head of the FCC, Tom Wheeler should have more power and do more. Who do you think Wheeler actually works for? Not for you or me.
On the other hand, they oppose building broadband, or anything else. The level of regulation they want pretty much means we'd be headed back to the stone age. Further, their policies would make it much, much harder for independent ISPs because their platform is that the government should do everything, and the government is controlled by the big corporations. So while it's not their intent, their policy proposals actually strongly favor the large established corporations by their effects.
TFS mentions that the contractor is trying to replace hundreds of different incompatible, overlapping study systems that the government has built or ordered. Does having hundreds of different systems with overlapping functionality trying to talk to ready other sound like proper engineering practice to you? That's what the government decision makers have come up with.
From my experience, government systems are designed for two primary goals. First, give each fiefdom it's piece and second, compliance. Compliance generally means complying with a crap load of old documents written by bureaucrats and lawyers. Actually functioning properly is a distant third on the priority list. Engineered design? Rarely is that mentioned.
Unlike Texas, where the state government employs thousands of programmers because they are so liberal. I just got out of a meeting with a bunch of government programmers from Texas. They'll all tell you the same thing - getting stuff done within red tape of a government agency takes them twice as long as long as it took them in the private sector jobs - unless there is a federal grant or contract involved, in which case it takes twenty times as long.
One project they did last year was for a federal government contract, for OSHA. They spent a year and a half developing the system, then during the beta test OSHA cancelled the project. This is after the feds had them write a system where it would print all the database records on paper, to be sent to the feds, who would manually enter it into a computer file, then send that file back to Texas, right back to the same agency who had sent it to them in the first place. That's about typical for the federal government. Government is one thing - it's supposed to be fair and deliberate, not far and efficient. The FEDERAL government is something else entirely.
These government agencies need to hire some developers for whom a few million hits is just another day. Something like girlsgonewild.com gets more traffic than healthcare.gov, and handles it with two well-configured commodity servers.
You're talking about regular phishing. Phishing is not spear-phishing. Phishing, like fishing, involves casting out a bait and hoping that someone (anyone) takes the bait.
Spear-phishing, like spear-fishing, is DEFINED as identifying a specific target and launching your weapon against that target specifically.
> We don't let car manufacturers advertise MPG
I understand the sentiment. Phone companies sometimes act like jerks. In this case, they are lying by using the word "unlimited". Data transfer is ALWAYS limited,on any media.
Mbps is a measure of speed, though. Technically, looking at how very large networks work, "up to 30 Mbps" is more like saying a Porsche can go "up to 150 MPH".
It's important information for consumers, too. I want to know how quickly my cat video will load - will I have to wait while it buffers? That's actually a completely separate measurement from how many cat videos I can download in a month. Unless of course you assume I'm downloading videos 24/7. I buy bandwidth that way - 24 / 7 dedicated bandwidth. It's VERY A expensive that way because you're not sharing the cost since you're not sharing the bandwidth.
In the long run, yes decreased cost results in decreased prices TO THE EXTENT THAT COMPETITION IS ALLOWED.
If, say Cricket wireless can provide the same service at half the cost, they'll charge less in order to get market share. On the macro level, it puts downward pressure on prices.
Here's a concrete example for you. In the web hosting business, like many others, 20% of the customers result in 80% of the cost. Most customers never require much attention, the servers just run, the bill goes out, and their credit card is charged. A few customers run opt-in mailing lists, and while those are legitimate, they cause some spam complaints that needed to be handled, they need DKIM set up, etc. Other customers feel they need to install a new script every week, so they need a lot of support, and since they do everything ad-hoc rather than settling into a pattern they miss paying their bull sometimes and you have to call them a couple of times to get them to pay. Many years ago, I started a very small invitation-only web hosting service. We only hostprofessional webmasters who know what they are doing, so they don't bug support with stupid questions. Their invoice is billed to their business credit card every month. I have customers I haven't heard from in years. Because of this, our costs are low, and so are our prices. We can provide excellent service at an excellent price because we're not spending our time and money dealing with spam and DMCA complaints, or chasing down past-due accounts. Our costs are low, therefore our prices are low.
* no, we won't host your site. Not unless we know you, or people we know vouch for you. We don't want new customers unless we know those new customers won't bring DMCA, spam, billing, or support problems.
I know it's not fashionable to read the article, but you didn't even read the title?
This is about wireless. I pointed out that the platform of the Green party is to give the FCC new powers to do a, b, c, and d. Which in effect means giving Wheeler those powers. What does that have to do with the price of tea in China? Or in your case, milk in China.
If you for some reason want to make a comparison between the US and China on the topic of "big government", you might notice that China isn't exactly an example of small government. In China, the milk producers report directly to the government bureaucrats, more or less exactly what the Greens want to do here. Yes, that system results in melamine in milk.
Here's what you're missing. The article is about what happens when a tower hits maximum capacity for a moment.
Suppose the hardware on the tower is capable of serving 1,000 people per second*. There are 1,050 people who want to download this second. Sorry, 50 people are going to have to wait one second. The tower can only handle 1,000. That's just a fact. They aren't "messing with" anything, that's just what the hardware is capable of.
What Verizon has decided is that when there is an overload and somebody will have to wait a second, it'll be the heaviest users who have to wait. After all, they've already used "more than their fair share".
* it's actually how many packets and bytes the tower can serve per second / millisecond, not customer count. The person who uses a lot will wait milliseconds.
Your entire post is basically repeating the same failure of logic over and over.
They don't put up a new tower for one customer, true. However, 1,000 customers like you mean that 10 more towers hit capacity and ten more need to be added. Verizon isn't making decisions one customer at a time. If they lost a many of their 150 GB / month customers, they could provide better service for a lot more 15GB / month customers and make a lot more money. That would be a good thing for them.
Your gigabit network is nice and all, but this conversation is about phones.
> Find the towers that sometimes saturate and then ...
Too late. TFA is about what happens while the tower is saturated, how they divide the available bandwidth between the customers WHEN IT'S SATURATED. Once that has already occurred, it's too late to go back and do analysis and not do what they are doing. They do in fact add towers as you suggest, but this story is about what happens when the tower first becomes overloaded. The overload has to be handled somehow immediately, while it's occurring.
#3 certainly needs some discussion.
I don't think the CONCEPT of government is itself bad. I do think that in this post-Constitutional era of the NSA, the Patriot Act, etc., giving more power to THIS government is foolish. Quite foolish, actually.
Note that when you wanted a good example of this government doing something that was clearly good, you had to go all the way back to Lincoln for examples. More Lincoln might be good. More Bush, or more Obama?
AFTER you fix it so that extraordinarily people are in power, giving them even more powers might make sense. Giving more power to this administration, or to President Chris Christie in a few years, or President Jeb Bush doesn't seem prudent.
> How many people does it really take to draw up a few rules for an industry?
Just one, Wheeler in this case. We agree their platform calls for the FCC to have more control, right?
We agree that the FCC is run by Wheeler, a career cable company lobbyist, right?
They want to give him more power, he's a cable-industry lobbyist. Do we disagree so far?
That means they want to give more power to a cable lobbyist. Seems pretty simple and clear to me.
Of course, they also WANT Wheeler to be a good guy and to act in the public interest. The fact is, he doesn't. Bureaucrats and politicians are self-serving. Wanting them to be saints doesn't make them saints. Pretending that they'll stop being that way if we just give them more power is foolish.
few examples of the federal government creating more liberty:
* abolishment of slavery (Civil War will give you a lot of fun arguing points, I'm sure, but still true)
Fugitive slave act.
* abolishment of Jim Crow laws
Abolishment of regulation = more liberty, yes
* child labor laws
1 point
* Roe v Wade (trollbait, but millions of Americans have been grateful for this liberty)
Troll bait indeed. Freedom to live vs freedom to kill. Going into that won't move this discussion forward.
* hopefully someday, breaking cable's blockade of good internet
It's government that enforces the cable monopolies. They are called franchises, and it's the government saying only one company can run service to a given neighborhood. An EXCELLENT example of government doing harm.
For the same price, NASA could have SpaceX build and launch ten rockets.
Alternatively, they could spend the same money to have SpaceX build ten rockets, then throw nine away and launch one.
That's what they've done, spent resources that can build ten rockets and ending up with one. That's PRECISELY equal to building ten rockets, then destroying nine of them.
Alternatively, they could have paid SpaceX to build the one rocket, then burned a few billion dollars in cash. They'd end up in the exact same position - billions of dollars gone, and one new rocket. It ends up precisely the same as just burning the cash.
I'll go through this with you one step at a time.
For the same price, NASA could have SpaceX build and launch ten rockets.
That would be ten times as many scientific experiments launched or whatever good thing the rocket is doing.
Alternatively, they could spend the same money to have SpaceX build ten rockets, then throw nine away and launch one.
That's virtually exactly the same as what they're doing - taking billions of dollars from taxpayers and ending up with one rocket.
It ends up exactly the same as throwing away nine rockets, removing from the economy whatever value those nine rockets have.
They could also spend the same amount of money having SpaceX build one rocket, then spending a few billion dollars sending kids to college. So, for the same price you can have either a) one rocket built by NASA or b) one rocket built by SpaceX plus provide a college education for a thousand people.
So what's the difference between those two? Both add a rocket to the economy. The difference is whether people get a college education or not. Which do you think is better for the economy, college graduates earning good money, or those same people flipping burgers? Waste REMOVES value from the economy.
Sure there are reasons that our methods have changed, of course. That's just not really related to the point I was making. TFS claims that the military is trying to find ways to kill more people, and that's simply the opposite of the truth. They've been working on ways to only blow up a specific room rather than blowing up a building or a city block. Secondly, IF they wanted to kill lots of people, they wouldn't need need to work on methods to do so. They've had the B-52 for 60 years or so. A single B-52 could kill thousands of people per day if you wanted it to. We COULD have wiped out Iraq in about a day and half. Building a democracy in Iraq is much, much more difficult than killing them would be.
I'm quoting their official platform. Are you saying that they're lying about what policies they advocate?
Their official platform has a list of new and expanded powers they want the FCC to have. That's their official platform. They just haven't thought through the fact that the FCC is run by cable industry lobbyist Tom Wheeler, so new powers for the FCC IS new powers for a top cable lobbyist.
I'll give you a thousand dollars if you can get a current copy of MS Word to read old MS Word documents, like OpenOffice can. Since Microsoft can't pull that off, I'm guessing you won't either. I suppose you could shellExecute(OpenOffice.exe) from a Word macro. :)
So yeah, you COULD throw out all your company's documents in order to avoid having two "power users" of Word learn different menu locations for a few things. That would make sense, if you had Balmer's dick in your mouth.
>> In its latest bid to kill more people, more efficiently, and at less cost
> Isn't this what we want all government agencies to strive for? When the military's actual job is to figure out how to kill people and destroy things with maximum effectiveness
In WWII the US military wanted to kill more people, more efficiently. They were pretty good at it.
Since then, it seems the challenge has been to find ways to kill the FEWEST possible number of people, while achieving a strategic goal. We tried to win the hearts and minds of Iraqis. Germans - we just blew them up.
> It simply boils down to greed at this point
Greed and a whole lot of stupid. Sprint has two brands for the same company, Sprint brand and Boost.
Boost is $35. Sprint is $85 or whatever with a "free" $150 phone. People have the choice, and they choose to pay an extra $50 / month for 36 months = $1,800 for that phone. Not just uneducated people either. I bet someone will get all defensive and reply to this post with justifications of why it's not stupid of them to pay $1,800 for a $150 phone, and that person is a Slashdot user - probably a computer programmer or something.
When so many people choose to pay ten times as much as the phone is worth, it's no surprise someone will sell it to them.
If you're not financing the phone via Verizon, you have no need to pay Verizon anything. Instead you just use one of their subsidiary brands or affiliate for about $35 / month.
I don't remember the current names for Verizon, but as an example Sprint and Boost are the same company, same LTE network Boost is $35 / month. You'd only pay the Sprint contract price if you were paying off your "free" phone.
> or you're functionality is limited, or the feature plain sucks
Our experience is the cost of limited functionality in off-the-shelf software is a significantly higher cost than the license cost.
With the old proprietary system, an employee would spend 4 hours each Friday copying and pasting from one program to another.
With the new modular open source software, I spent an hour authoring a module to completely automate the data transfer, and have it happen in real time.
For just that one little function alone, this year we saved 4 hours X 52 weeks X ~$40/hr = $8,320 per year.
I do one of those every week. A little change to the software for a big change in the process. I'd be surprised if we haven't saved at least $1 million / year total, from all the little tweaks, correction, and additions we've done to the open source software to make our process better, faster, more efficient, and more accurate. I know the P/L from the from the program using the open source stuff sure has improved, but it's hard to quantify how much of that is due to the software. I could easily prove it's saved at least as much as my salary though, and my salary was being paid when we had the proprietary software too, for a specialist who was paid to admin the system and figure out hacks to get the proprietary system to almost meet our needs using duct tape and bubble gum.
Let's try this one more time, because clearly you missed the entire point. I'm familiar with their platform, and with the actual effects of the policies they advocate, which are frequently the opposite of their stated goals. Let me copy / paste the thesis from my post again since you seem to have missed reading it the first time:
> so while it's not their intent, their policy proposals actually strongly favor the large established corporations by their effects.
To avoid to much redundancy, I'm going to stick to just the first half of their platform to show a dozen or so of their policy proposals. Te second half is more of the same, and a dozen is enough to see the pattern. Their platform includes the following position statements:
citizens are the government [this is their key mistake that makes their policies go against their intentions].
ownership and control of the electromagnetic spectrum to the public [government].
federally funded childcare
Livable Income [federal government pays everyone]
[expand social security]
[Federal] Civilian Conservation Corps
End the privatization of broadcast frequencies [government-controlled media]
Tax electronic advertising to fund democratic [government] media outlets.
require that holders of broadcast licenses present controversial issues of public importance in an equitable and balanced manner [whatever the current administration considers "balanced"]
revoke licenses from outlets that fail to satisfy these obligations.
Governmental (PEG) Access Television
generous public [government] funding for Public Broadcasting System (PBS) television and National Public Radio (NPR)
It's pretty clear, isn't it, that they are for more government - WAY more government. In fact, the preamble of their platform says they seek to refute the idea "that government is intrinsically undesirable and destructive of liberty". They think more federal government leads to more liberty. How cute.
The fact, and this point isn't really arguable, is that the federal government is largely controlled by large corporate interests. That's simply what is. The greens want a lot more federal government control of people. The corps control the government. Therefore, the policy proposals of the greens would in fact mean more corporate control by way of their assistants, the politicians. The greens don't WANT more corporate control, but they want more government control, and don't seem to realize it's precisely the same thing. It's the same people running the corporations and the government, as we've seen this week with the chairman of the FCC / president of the National Cable Television Association, Tom Wheeler.
When Greens say "the FCC should have more power and do more", that means the head of the FCC, Tom Wheeler should have more power and do more. Who do you think Wheeler actually works for? Not for you or me.
On the other hand, they oppose building broadband, or anything else. The level of regulation they want pretty much means we'd be headed back to the stone age. Further, their policies would make it much, much harder for independent ISPs because their platform is that the government should do everything, and the government is controlled by the big corporations. So while it's not their intent, their policy proposals actually strongly favor the large established corporations by their effects.
TFS mentions that the contractor is trying to replace hundreds of different incompatible, overlapping study systems that the government has built or ordered. Does having hundreds of different systems with overlapping functionality trying to talk to ready other sound like proper engineering practice to you? That's what the government decision makers have come up with.
From my experience, government systems are designed for two primary goals. First, give each fiefdom it's piece and second, compliance. Compliance generally means complying with a crap load of old documents written by bureaucrats and lawyers. Actually functioning properly is a distant third on the priority list. Engineered design? Rarely is that mentioned.
Unlike Texas, where the state government employs thousands of programmers because they are so liberal. I just got out of a meeting with a bunch of government programmers from Texas. They'll all tell you the same thing - getting stuff done within red tape of a government agency takes them twice as long as long as it took them in the private sector jobs - unless there is a federal grant or contract involved, in which case it takes twenty times as long.
One project they did last year was for a federal government contract, for OSHA. They spent a year and a half developing the system, then during the beta test OSHA cancelled the project. This is after the feds had them write a system where it would print all the database records on paper, to be sent to the feds, who would manually enter it into a computer file, then send that file back to Texas, right back to the same agency who had sent it to them in the first place. That's about typical for the federal government. Government is one thing - it's supposed to be fair and deliberate, not far and efficient. The FEDERAL government is something else entirely.
These government agencies need to hire some developers for whom a few million hits is just another day. Something like girlsgonewild.com gets more traffic than healthcare.gov, and handles it with two well-configured commodity servers.
You're talking about regular phishing. Phishing is not spear-phishing. Phishing, like fishing, involves casting out a bait and hoping that someone (anyone) takes the bait.
Spear-phishing, like spear-fishing, is DEFINED as identifying a specific target and launching your weapon against that target specifically.