| > How many lives would you have extinguished I’ve worked on life & death Citrix modernisation projects several times: the local equivalent of the 911 emergency phone call centre and then computers on wheels used for during paediatric surgeries. A help line for suicidal children too. People conflate the usecase with the technology, assuming that “important thing” must have some mystical properties that requires legacy or some other “special flavor” of IT architecture. They’re wrong. The best example of this flawed thinking was some person arguing with me about the computer upgrade that F-22 fighters are receiving this year… to the same level of performance as a first-gen Apple Watch! Of course, that costs an absurd amount of money and is already delayed. “But it’s a stealth fighter!” people will argue until they’re blue in the face. Sure. Yes. But that’s a property of the outside surface, not the computer inside. Other modern fighters, including stealth fighters, have hilariously better computers for a fraction of the cost. The F-22 procurement process was corrupted and some vendor is doing the minimum, twenty years late, at ten times the price. That’s what happened. Everything else is a “story”. A fiction. A cover of the ass type. Same thing here. There’s a contract for providing IT services to the FAA. It’s a bad contract. That’s what happened. That’s all. There is no mystical or magical capability provided by floppies that can’t be better served by, for example, USB thumb drives. |