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From: Jim Rogers <jimmaureenrogers@worldnet.att.net>
Subject: Re: Silicon Valley techies suit up Army with sleeker gear
Date: Mon, 11 Feb 2002 01:55:38 GMT
Date: 2002-02-11T01:55:38+00:00	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <3C6724A4.7000307@worldnet.att.net> (raw)
In-Reply-To: NSE98.24295$Ep4.3841456198@newssvr16.news.prodigy.com

This is a wonderful article. It gives support to the idea that
off the shelf hardware and software is more reliable and better
than Mil Spec hardware and software.

Note that the Silicon Valley solution does not work properly for
10 days of use. Clearly, the problem the Silicon Valley gurus had
is that they do not understand "the old government" programming
language.

What makes Windows CE more reliable than a true real time OS?
What makes off-the-shelf software work better under DoD
environments. The answer is simple. Their system almost works
and they have avoided most of the reliability requirements.
I also suspect they have avoided DoD frequency requirements
as well as DoD message specifications such as the Joint Variable
Message Format. Wait until they get to the system integration
tests where the Land Warrior must communicate with systems that
actually follow DoD specifications. Success may be spelled
differently at that point.

Isn't Silicon Valley arrogance beautiful? They know all that is
useful. Anything they do not know must be useless.

Jim Rogers
Colorado Springs, Colorado USA

Ken Garlington wrote:

> (A quick excerpt from a recent USA Today article:)
> 
> "The early Land Warrior software rarely worked... To troubleshoot, in early
> 1999 Jette brought in high-tech consultants Exponent, a Silicon Valley firm
> that studies engineering and structural failures and accidents. The firm
> felt that Raytheon had followed Army specs for the project too closely. The
> old prototype had to be trashed and a new computer and radio system built...
> The Silicon Valley engineers slapped together a crude model in three months.
> They went to retailers Best Buy and Fry's Electronics and bought several
> cheap, off-the-shelf products, including Microsoft Windows CE software and a
> wireless card to allow Land Warrior computers to send data. The most
> critical technical step: They wrote the software in common programming
> language used by most software engineers, rather than using old government
> programming language, as Raytheon had.... Soldiers say the newest Land
> Warrior is the best version yet... Its Microsoft Windows 2000 software still
> has bugs but is nearing the project goal of 10 days of use without breaking
> down."
> 
> (The full article can be found at:)
> 
> http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/tech/2002/02/07/tech-military.htm
> 
> 
> 




  reply	other threads:[~2002-02-11  1:55 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 18+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2002-02-11  1:11 Silicon Valley techies suit up Army with sleeker gear Ken Garlington
2002-02-11  1:55 ` Jim Rogers [this message]
2002-02-11  6:07   ` Richard Riehle
2002-02-11  8:09     ` Hyman Rosen
2002-02-12 16:53       ` Richard Riehle
2002-02-11 15:33     ` Marin David Condic
2002-02-11  6:09 ` David Starner
2002-02-11 13:27   ` Jim Rogers
2002-02-11 18:34     ` David Starner
2002-02-12  1:42     ` Warner Bruns
2002-02-12  2:32     ` Ken Garlington
2002-02-12  5:58       ` Jim Rogers
2002-02-12 12:07         ` Larry Kilgallen
2002-02-12 13:13           ` Jim Rogers
2002-02-12 18:21           ` Marin David Condic
2002-02-12 12:27         ` David Gillon
2002-02-13  5:04           ` tmoran
2002-02-11 14:09 ` Preben Randhol
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