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Le Chaud Lapin
Guest
On Dec 18, 6:22 pm, spop...@speedymail.org (Steve Pope) wrote:
NASA:
"Hey...Tyrone...I know they said Mars... but do you think they'd be OK
with a Saturn swing-around just for kicks?"
These guys have meetings ad nauseum. Things that would take you and me
to think about an make a decision in 4 hours, they discuss for four
months. Everything is deliberate. Everything is known. NSA and other
goverment agencies know all about what they are doing, as they are
doing it.
If crypto was not in the spec, the decision was deliberate. Since it
was not in the spec, the decision to not put it in was deliberate,
which is stupid, because it would have been easy, even in 1990, given
the amount of money involved.
Note that it does not take an entire team to do crypto. I could rattle
off the names of 10 (prominent) individuals who could have done the
crypto part single-handedly and likely not have made a mistake. My
guess is that such individuals would have been content with a
fraction, say, 1%, of the $1+ billion spent:
http://postmanpatel.blogspot.com/2006/04/global-hawk-uav-delays-cost-overruns.html
-Le Chaud Lapin-
I'll try to remember that the next time I'm designing a spacecraft forLe Chaud Lapin <jaibudu...@gmail.com> wrote:
So the excuse that there was "not enough time" is not an an excuse,
IMO.
Probably encryption was not in the requirements. It would of
course be illegal for a defense contractor to add features
just because they thought those features were important...
they must trace back to a contractual requirement.
NASA:
"Hey...Tyrone...I know they said Mars... but do you think they'd be OK
with a Saturn swing-around just for kicks?"
These guys have meetings ad nauseum. Things that would take you and me
to think about an make a decision in 4 hours, they discuss for four
months. Everything is deliberate. Everything is known. NSA and other
goverment agencies know all about what they are doing, as they are
doing it.
If crypto was not in the spec, the decision was deliberate. Since it
was not in the spec, the decision to not put it in was deliberate,
which is stupid, because it would have been easy, even in 1990, given
the amount of money involved.
Note that it does not take an entire team to do crypto. I could rattle
off the names of 10 (prominent) individuals who could have done the
crypto part single-handedly and likely not have made a mistake. My
guess is that such individuals would have been content with a
fraction, say, 1%, of the $1+ billion spent:
http://postmanpatel.blogspot.com/2006/04/global-hawk-uav-delays-cost-overruns.html
-Le Chaud Lapin-