545 vs 300,000,000 people.

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txgolfer is confused who can't make up his mind. :hmm:

:lol: No I know who to believe here.

I think relating what was created in the 60's and 70's by college and the military to what we know as the internet today is like saying the guy who invented the wheel invented the automobile. But if netrox wants to give government under Nixon credit for the internet I guess republicans will take that credit:giggle:......Oh and then the other major advances in the 80's and 1991. Who was President then????:hmm::wave:

Yes algore might have introduced a bill or 2......but who signed them into law???

Don't worry silly democrats......maybe the robotic bee will be in every household someday. And that condom study on why males don't like to wear them could be ground breaking.

There is one interesting thing here though. Obama did have the foresight to make the million dollar "stimulus at work" highway signs in WARNING ORANGE:laugh2::laugh2::laugh2:

http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/01/25/kaye.signs/index.html

-btw.....what is that guy shoveling...:lol:
 
Stop it. The Internet would not be possible if not for the government.

"DARPA sponsored or encouraged the development of TCP/IP implementations for many operating systems and then scheduled a migration of all hosts on all of its packet networks to TCP/IP. On January 1, 1983, TCP/IP protocols became the only approved protocol on the ARPANET, replacing the earlier NCP protocol."

History of the Internet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

TCP/IP is what we use for the Internet today. Thanks to our taxes.

The Web? Thanks to Al Gore's bill:

"A potential turning point for the World Wide Web began with the introduction[48] of the Mosaic web browser[49] in 1993, a graphical browser developed by a team at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (NCSA-UIUC), led by Marc Andreessen. Funding for Mosaic came from the High-Performance Computing and Communications Initiative, a funding program initiated by the High Performance Computing and Communication Act of 1991 also known as the Gore Bill ."

Once again, funded by our government.

It was then private companies decided to capitalize on it and built their own backbones to interconnect with the TCP/IP protocols.

oh the indigestion... *drinking Pepto*

you do not understand the concept of capital-ism and tax-ism. Look at the country with socialism or communism. and then compare it to country with capitalism. Think about why the gap between these concepts are so wide apart.

Obviously - the Internet would not have been possible for entire American citizens if it weren't for capitalism. ARPANET was possible purely on tax money because it was strictly limited to government and some universities... since we were in Cold War. If you look back at my post #31, you will see that a small portion of tax money is also used for incentive purpose. That is what made it possible for innovation to begin. Spend a few buck (tax money) to start it up and then let the corporations do rest on their own dime.

Did you know our space rockets and space technology are built by corporations on their own dime? They present their cool toys to us and then we will decide to contract with them or not. If we don't like it, then they usually bankrupt and they go bye bye. Handful of space companies are small private companies funded by venture capitalists. Couple of big boys are the one with big fat budgets like Lockheed and Boeing.

Anyway - the tax money spent on creating Internet is very minuscule compared to the amount of money spent on it by corporations. I'm glad that this America is funded and motivated by capitalism, not tax.

My problem with your argument is that you seem to think that it is the tax that made this country great and powerful :ugh:
 
Let's see. Jiro is an internet guy......and netrox is quoting wiki.....Which one should I believe :hmm:

I make a living as a software engineer and have done since 1994. I also worked for a few ISP companies. Prior to that, I developed local software. Even before that, my father was a software engineer for mainframe computers (it was funded by government as well - it was later that he got into a private software company) so he got me computers before most people could even afford it. He also got me a slow analog modem which was $2000 at that time. Insane.

Just finished my last intermediate programming class - made straight 100's on all homework assignments and exams. It was a piece of cake thanks to my many years of programming.

I've studied TCP/IP protocol networking and Wikipedia is basically repeating what it was already said in old books.
 
I make a living as a software engineer and have done since 1994. I also worked for a few ISP companies. Prior to that, I developed local software. Even before that, my father was a software engineer for mainframe computers (it was funded by government as well - it was later that he got into a private software company) so he got me computers before most people could even afford it. He also got me a slow analog modem which was $2000 at that time. Insane.

Just finished my last intermediate programming class - made straight 100's on all homework assignments and exams. It was a piece of cake thanks to my many years of programming.

I've studied TCP/IP protocol networking and Wikipedia is basically repeating what it was already said in old books.


Thanks for sharing:wave:
 
oh the indigestion... *drinking Pepto*

you do not understand the concept of capital-ism and tax-ism. Look at the country with socialism or communism. and then compare it to country with capitalism. Think about why the gap between these concepts are so wide apart.

My problem with your argument is that you seem to think that it is the tax that made this country great and powerful :ugh:

It was the point - without taxes, internet would not be what it is now.

Without taxes, our glorious defense would be NOWHERE as advanced as it is now. During WWII, tax rate was 90% on the rich to raise money for wars and research.. and guess what we got? Atomic bombs and interstate highways. :)

And you keep thinking that tax = socialism/communism. It ain't so. All capitalist countries have taxes.

Just how the hell are we able to create Internet and nuclear weapons and all that if not for taxes? Remember, they cost several hundred billions of dollars.
 
It was the point - without taxes, internet would not be what it is now.

Without taxes, our glorious defense would be NOWHERE as advanced as it is now. During WWII, tax rate was 90% on the rich to raise money for wars and research.. and guess what we got? Atomic bombs and interstate highways. :)

And you keep thinking that tax = socialism/communism. It ain't so. All capitalist countries have taxes.

Just how the hell are we able to create Internet and nuclear weapons and all that if not for taxes? Remember, they cost several hundred billions of dollars.


Yeah and toilet seats cost $1500......That's your government at work
 
It was the point - without taxes, internet would not be what it is now.

Without taxes, our glorious defense would be NOWHERE as advanced as it is now. During WWII, tax rate was 90% on the rich to raise money for wars and research.. and guess what we got? Atomic bombs and interstate highways. :)

And you keep thinking that tax = socialism/communism. It ain't so. All capitalist countries have taxes.

Just how the hell are we able to create Internet and nuclear weapons and all that if not for taxes? Remember, they cost several hundred billions of dollars.

where did I say the capitalist country should not have tax? I only said you got the concept wrong. See back on my post #22 and post #24. I said this country is driven by capitalism, not tax. You got it other way around.

btw - do you have a source that said 90% tax rate during WW2 contributed to a-bomb and interstate highways?
 
I make a living as a software engineer and have done since 1994. I also worked for a few ISP companies. Prior to that, I developed local software. Even before that, my father was a software engineer for mainframe computers (it was funded by government as well - it was later that he got into a private software company) so he got me computers before most people could even afford it. He also got me a slow analog modem which was $2000 at that time. Insane.

Just finished my last intermediate programming class - made straight 100's on all homework assignments and exams. It was a piece of cake thanks to my many years of programming.

I've studied TCP/IP protocol networking and Wikipedia is basically repeating what it was already said in old books.

add Political Science 101 and Economy 101 to your course list :) It will expand your horizon and you will fully understand the concept of capitalism and the American transformation.

btw - those courses you took only teach you the current technology. it does not teach you the history from step 1 to now. Who does that anyway? Mind you - I graduated with IT degree and the amount of time it spent on history of Internet was like 15 min total but I don't need to learn it because I was there when Internet/Apple/RIM/Microsoft/etc were born. The only difference between us is that one has a different view on it which is not half-true :)

but I'm sure TXGolfer, Reba, and many others know what it was like before Internet was born :lol:
 
Ok....my bad they were only $640 :shrug:

A Long Flight to Nowhere
Wednesday, August 25, 2004
By: Angela French

Wastewatcher, August 2004

Following the revelations of the Pentagon’s $436 hammer and $640 toilet seat, Congress enacted the Competition in Contracting Act in 1984 (“CICA”) to provide “full and open competition” for all Government contracts. While progress has been made, much waste and abuse remains in the contracting system. The latest nightmare for taxpayers is the Department of Defense’s (“DoD”) Defense Travel System (“DTS”), which has produced miserable results after six years of development and an investment of more than $500 million.



In May 1998, the Defense Travel System Program Management Office (“DTS PMO”) awarded—competitively—a $263.7 million contract to Northrop Grumman (“Northrop”) to develop an “eTravel system” which would function as an automated, electronic in-house travel agency for the entire DoD.


The eTravel system was supposed to make business travel quicker, easier, and more efficient. Essentially, it would eliminate the processing of paper travel orders and direct communications with travel agents. Those functions would be done on each traveler’s PC. The development, testing, and implementation of the eTravel system was to be completed within 120 days of the contract award, and the system was to be up and running in 11,000 DoD sites worldwide by September 2001.



According to the original contract, all costs associated with developing, testing, and deploying DTS were to be paid by Northrop, and the company would receive no revenue until the system was completed, proven effective, and operationally deployed. At that time, Northrop would then receive a one-time, fixed price of $20.00 per DoD user connected to the DTS, plus a fixed fee of approximately $5.27 for each DoD trip performed using the travel system.



But in early 2002, after four years of test failures, the contract with Northrop was completely restructured by the DTS PMO. Recognizing Northrop was still years away from having a functional eTravel system, DoD increased the scope of the contract to include traditional travel management services at premium rates. This contract revision was not competitively bid, and may have cost taxpayers an additional $14-$16 million.



In addition, the expense and risk of development, testing, and deployment of the DTS throughout DoD was shifted from Northrop to the taxpayers. Even worse, more than $50 million of taxpayers’ money was paid to Northrop for the company’s previous unsuccessful efforts, and DoD agreed to pay approximately $35-$50 million each year to continue efforts to develop a functional system. The revised contact limited Northrop’s development efforts to only a web-based (e.g., Internet) system similar to commercial systems already available. Although the government was now paying all development costs, DoD allowed Northrop to retain full ownership of DTS—thus ensuring that once the system was operationally deployed, Northrop could never be replaced.



In July 2002, the DoD inspector general (“IG”) released a report that estimated the costs of DTS had grown from the original $263.7 million to $491.9 million—about 87 percent higher than the original contract amount. The IG concluded DTS would not be finished until 2006, five years behind schedule, and criticized the management of the DTS program. Although the IG recommended that DTS be cancelled, DoD continued to fund its development.



In 2003, a competitor challenged the legality of the revised Northrop contract and sought to have DoD’s requirement for a worldwide, web-based travel system and the traditional travel services be opened to competition. According to an opinion by the U.S. Court of Federal Claims on July 26, 2004, the lack of competitive bidding for the restructured Northrop contract in 2002 was a violation of CICA and unlawful. In a small victory for taxpayers, the Court has ordered the government to terminate the traditional travel services portion of the contract and conduct a competitive procurement that will result in a new contractor performing these services by November 2004.



However, the Court stated that even if it assumed the remainder of the restructured DTS contract was unlawful due to the pricing and technical changes, it was too late to terminate the contract and re-compete the web-based travel management system. Thus, despite a violation of law, the Court decided that it would be too great a hardship on the government to terminate the contract.



Unfortunately, the Court’s opinion was not supported by the facts. Although the Court concluded that DTS is substantially complete, hundreds of millions of additional dollars will be required to finish the system by late 2006. While DTS has been operationally deployed at a number of military facilities, it is rarely used by DoD travelers. DTS also has significant functional problems: DTS frequently cannot find or guarantee the lowest applicable airfare available, nor can it be used for international travel, and it has great difficulty booking hotels to coincide with travel schedules. Travel agents who have tested DTS estimate that it automatically books flights which can cost as much as $1,200 more per ticket than applicable fares available for government travelers.



DoD issues around 5 million tickets each year, but only 15,000 have been bought through DTS since 1998. The cost of DTS was estimated in 2002 at $491.9 million. Each of the 15,000 tickets issued to date by DTS has therefore cost taxpayers approximately $33,000. The DTS PMO has not made available current estimates of the cost to finish the system, but the final costs are likely to be well in excess of $500 million. Notwithstanding the exorbitant cost to develop DTS, the most significant expense actually may be the potential excess ticketing prices that could be as much as $400 million annually. The $436 hammer and $640 toilet seat pale in comparison to this excessive waste, abuse, and mismanagement.



In June 2004, the Government Accountability Office issued a series of reports on waste and fraud within DoD’s travel program (none of which were related to the DTS and its problems). In response, DoD testified before Congress that “the long-term answer will be the automated DTS that controls the travel order and payment process from beginning to end.” It is difficult to believe that a system which costs $33,000 per ticket and cannot find the lowest-priced airfare will eliminate the waste.



Northrop continues to be able to provide eTravel services to the Pentagon because the Court of Federal Claims concluded that DoD would have to start over if the Northrop contract were terminated, face a five-year delay, and the additional expenditure of hundreds of millions of dollars for a new system. Unfortunately, the Court ignored the readily available eTravel services from privately-funded systems developed by EDS and CW Government Travel, Inc., which have been approved by the General Services Administration (GSA). DoD could quickly procure their eTravel services at substantially lower rates from one of these GSA-approved vendors. But instead of being removed from DoD, the Northrop system appears to be migrating to the civilian side of the federal government.



GSA has recently approved CW Government Travel, Inc., EDS, and Northrop for eTravel services for all federal agencies, including DoD. Every agency will have to choose one of the three vendors for their eTravel services by January 1, 2005. The GSA requires CW Government Travel, Inc. and EDS to absorb their own development costs and their revenues are contingent on the successful use of their eTravel system. Northrop, however, is being allowed to compete for GSA business with taxpayer financing. Even so, Northrop charges more than its competitors for the same travel services.



Unfortunately, three civilian agencies recently have chosen Northrop, apparently due to misleading information from the Pentagon touting the success of the DTS. If this trend continues, Northrop may end up with a virtual perpetual monopoly on all automated government travel services. Should this occur, taxpayers will be big losers.



The U.S. is fighting two wars overseas and the national deficit is at a record level. The DoD and other agencies should look to spend their limited resources more wisely than on the DTS. Once again, taxpayers are footing the bill on a high tech boondoggle that is not getting off the ground.



CAGW will be issuing a special report on the DTS scandal in early September. v
 
Where you get that info?

Must be a reason for $1500 bill.

yes there is a reason. the incompetent spending by government because they think they can print all the money they want.

*eyeing at Department Logistics Agency (DLA) and any other agencies*
 
Hot Plate Special
At a time of war, when our troops don't always have the best and safest equipment, the Pentagon is buying $20 plastic ice-cube trays. That's right, 99 cents at the Dollar Store or $20 each from a Pentagon vendor. Since the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) initiated what it calls the prime vendor program, the Pentagon has been encouraged to buy from a cherry-picked group of manufacturers. The idea is to favor vendors who will speed up the delivery of goods to our military bases. It's a great deal -- for the manufacturers, that is. They don't have to worry much about competitive bids, which means they can charge absurd prices for their products and services.
It turns out that in the spring of 2004, the Pentagon paid $1,000 each for hot plates, even though it had previously bought the same ones for $450. What's worse, the Pentagon shelled out $22,797 apiece for 34-inch refrigerators -- more than $7,000 a foot -- causing Congressman Joe Wilson to exclaim, "That looks like it costs $99.99 at Lowe's!"

"This is the heir to the $600 toilet seat and the $400 hammer that you had in the 1980s," says Steve Ellis of Taxpayers for Common Sense. But what really burns him up is that "it doesn't take an acquisition professional to know that paying $20 for an ice-cube tray is a bad deal!"

It's that kind of infuriating waste that led California Congressman Duncan Hunter to bark, "This is a real slap in the face to the guy making $13,000 a year who is engaged in a firefight in Ramadi."

After getting an earful from the House Armed Services Committee, which called the Pentagon purchasing agents incompetent, the Defense Department initiated an internal review of the prime vendor system. The DLA ultimately agreed to seek out more competitive bids, but only among the preselected vendors.

So has the system changed? Not nearly enough. A Knight Ridder investigation found that the process, which was supposed to save money by saving time, actually cost American taxpayers 20 percent more in 2005 than it had the previous year -- or an additional $1.5 billion.

Maybe we should just let Wal-Mart handle Pentagon procurement. At least that outfit knows a good deal from a really lousy one.


Designing Men
You might think $120 million is plenty of money to build a new headquarters for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) in Washington, D.C. -- unless you're the bureau's former director, Carl J. Truscott. In fact, the massive project he oversaw for two years was nearly $20 million over budget.

It would have been even worse if the ATF hadn't nipped some of Truscott's projects in the bud after allegations of gross mismanagement of public funds. While the ATF was considering deep cuts in the number of new cars and bulletproof vests that it provides its agents, Truscott was busy mapping out his master suite in the new building. According to a Justice Department investigation, Truscott planned to spend nearly $63,000 on hardwood floors plus an additional $243,000 for woodwork and custom trim (not to mention "upgrades" for the suite, including a 42-inch retractable flat-screen television for his office, and a second flat-screen TV, radio speakers and a telephone for his quartzite-tile bathroom).

He also intended to spiff up the operations center at ATF headquarters, to the tune of around $145,000 -- a plan that led investigators to say Truscott's eye for detail "related more to appearance than to functionality."

When Truscott wasn't planning his elaborate offices, he was being escorted around town by a security detail that cost nearly $1 million a year and included five full-time agents, a medic and two SUVs -- unprecedented security for an ATF chief.

While claiming that the Justice Department report "fails to put the allegations made into context," Truscott nonetheless resigned last August. Meanwhile, the more investigators have learned, the worse Truscott has come off. It seems he had some 20 ATF employees use official time and government property -- like ATF stock footage -- to help create a video for his nephew's high school project.

And, in a fit of pomposity, Truscott ordered two female administrative staffers to prepare and serve him lunch. According to the Justice Department report, Truscott once even demanded that one of the staffers announce, "Lunch is served." Maybe he should be served a subpoena instead.


Sunken Costs
Honoring the past is certainly important, which is why many in South Carolina are keen to see the Hunley, an epic Civil War submarine, preserved. The Hunley was raised from its sandy grave off the South Carolina coast in 2000, at a cost of $6 million. Four years later, State Senator Glenn F. McConnell, a Civil War buff, delivered a eulogy -- dressed as a Confederate general -- when the crew's remains were buried in Charleston.

But that's the least of his efforts to memorialize the sub. An investigation by The State, South Carolina's largest newspaper, alleged that McConnell has funneled more than $8 million of taxpayer money to Friends of the Hunley, a foundation he established. Among the newspaper's findings: The foundation has paid at least $1 million to a public relations firm to promote the Hunley; the 11 employees of Friends of the Hunley receive a total annual salary of almost $500,000; five employees at the Department of Archives and History, working for the Hunley, together receive over $200,000 a year; and the College of Charleston has four employees devoted to the submarine, at a combined pay of nearly $240,000 a year. Add another $300,000 or so for the Hunley laboratory's annual lease.

So how much is too much to preserve the old sub? Though the initial cost of the project was estimated at $5 million to $10 million, now it seems no one knows just how much will be spent. According to The State's award-winning series on the Hunley, South Carolina taxpayers will eventually shell out a whopping $80 million. (A spokesperson for Friends of the Hunley says that tally is off by "millions" due to "double entries" and "appraisals of assets the state already owned." The newspaper, however, stands by its calculation.)

The Post and Courier, a Charleston newspaper, also reported that "public money spent or currently committed to the submarine projects" adds up to about $32 million. Unlike The State, though, The Post and Courier didn't include proposed spending. South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford underscored the financial confusion when The State asked him how much the sub would cost the public. "I don't have a clue," he said.

John Crangle of the watchdog group Common Cause says the Hunley project is a "huge waste of public resources, when money could be better spent on health care, education or transportation."

McConnell calls the Hunley "a tremendously successful project" and disputes the charges of overspending. Still, with a price tag of tens of millions -- which, for all anyone knows, is climbing by the minute -- it's time the taxpayers shut their wallets and demand some answers.
 
btw - those courses you took only teach you the current technology. it does not teach you the history from step 1 to now. Who does that anyway? Mind you - I graduated with IT degree and the amount of time it spent on history of Internet was like 15 min total but I don't need to learn it because I was there when Internet/Apple/RIM/Microsoft/etc were born. The only difference between us is that one has a different view on it which is not half-true :)

Oh? How old are you? If MS and Apple were born then you must be older than 35... I was born before Apple/MS existed.
 
Oh? How old are you? If MS and Apple were born then you must be older than 35... I was born before Apple/MS existed.

less than 35 but close to 30's :)

well the first Macintosh was in 1984 and Windows 3.1 was released in 1994. The previous version doesn't really count in my book. For you - USENET, Telnet, etc.
 
"It's a great deal -- for the manufacturers, that is. They don't have to worry much about competitive bids, which means they can charge absurd prices for their products and services. It turns out that in the spring of 2004, the Pentagon paid $1,000 each for hot plates, even though it had previously bought the same ones for $450."

That, my friends, is what capitalism is all about! :)
 
"It's a great deal -- for the manufacturers, that is. They don't have to worry much about competitive bids, which means they can charge absurd prices for their products and services. It turns out that in the spring of 2004, the Pentagon paid $1,000 each for hot plates, even though it had previously bought the same ones for $450."

That, my friends, is what capitalism is all about! :)

???? We taxpayers wouldn't buy it for $1,000. It's the government who foolishly spent $1,000 for something that costs $450. All for more reason why your concept failed.
 
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