See a response received below.  Author's name deleted as I did not
ask if I could post the response.

My comment:  Who ever thought that a Federal Government, especially
the U.S. military, would be years ahead of private industry in its
distribution and availability of standards?

George Alspaugh

---------------------- Forwarded by George Alspaugh/Lex/Lexmark on 10/01/99
11:05 AM ---------------------------

George:

That world exists. It's called the United States' Military Standards. They
are free. they are not copyrighted, so you can copy and distribute them.
They are available over the internet. They were meant to be used, not to
promote some hidden agenda.

Best of all, they are clear, concise, and written in REAL ENGLISH, not some
incomprehensible third-rate translation.

check out:

http://www.dodssp.daps.mil/

Also the FCC rules are not copyrighted etc.

We may complain about our government, but you gotta love them once you see how
screwed up other countries are.


 At 10:18 AM 9/30/1999 -0400, you wrote:
>
>Most of the world entered the information some decades ago.  The
>greatest leap forward has been the advent of the internet.  I need not
>elaborate on how quickly one can get information on almost any topic at
>their workstation via the internet.
>
>Sadly, the world of standards is stuck in the 1950's.  Months or years
>go by to get consensus on new versions.  Those who need them most must
>place "orders" for precious hard copies of new standards at exhorbitant
>prices.
>
>I can see why commercial books will always cost something, as they represent
>creative intellectual property that are made available by the the author/
>publisher for profit.  However, why would international standards bodies,
>which are not for profit, make it so difficult and expensive to acquire
>documents that make products safer for everyone?
>
>Imagine a world where......
>
>-  Every user of standards had a PC workstation
>-  There was a world-wide internet to distribute information
>-  International standards bodies maintained a website of standards
>-  All standards contained hyper-links to related standards
>-  Subscription to access these standards was free
>-  Or, each subscriber (manufacturer) paid a modest fee per year for access
>
>
>Well, we are part way there......
>
>
>George Alspaugh
>Lexmark International Inc.
>






---------
This message is coming from the emc-pstc discussion list.
To cancel your subscription, send mail to [email protected]
with the single line: "unsubscribe emc-pstc" (without the
quotes).  For help, send mail to [email protected],
[email protected], [email protected], or
[email protected] (the list administrators).

Reply via email to