Posted on 12/07/2013 8:53:47 AM PST by Hojczyk
The technology troubles that plagued the HealthCare.gov website rollout may not have come as a shock to people who work for certain agencies of the government especially those who still use floppy disks, the cutting-edge technology of the 1980s.
Agencies are also permitted to submit the documents on CD-ROMs and floppy disks, but not on flash drives or SD cards. The Federal Register Act says that an agency has to submit the original and two duplicate originals or two certified copies, said Amy P. Bunk, The Federal Registers director of legal affairs and policy. As long as an agency does that through one of the approved methods of transmission, she said, theyve met the statutory requirement.
But the secure email system which uses software called Public Key Infrastructure technology is expensive, and some government agencies have not yet upgraded to it. As a result, some agencies still scan documents on to a computer and save them on floppy disks. The disks are then sent by courier to the register.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
But it is a pretty easy thing to have a secure website on which you can submit information. Adobe even has a way to do an electronic signature. It really shouldn’t be so difficult.
LMAO
What a tribute the the pecker in chief.
I worked at a Marine base as a civilian computer programmer back in the '80s. One Marine told me about a demo he had seen. The highers ups were all abuzz over the new computers coming out and wanted to put all records on them.
He said that at the demo, the sergeant held up a notebook with all the pertinent data about the company, then fired a .45 round through it. Then he went over to a CRT and did the same thing. "Now which one will still work?" he asked.
Yup.
Think of the gaps in family history when these photos and movies are lost forever.
Scanning and preserving photos really is the best if you maintain the files.
Hey, maybe there is a business in this!
I also wonder what will happen to all of the paper nav charts. Electronic GPS nav systems dominate now. What happens when the nav systems die, wear out, or lose their power.
Hang on to those slide rules, M-1’s and compasses.
Flash storage is likely banned there for being such high capacity, so fast, and so TINY that it’s way too easy to walk off with vast amounts of secrets without detection. When you’re talking 64GB on a fingernail, yeah they’re gonna ban ‘em.
We were required by one of our Federal contracts (an agency of huge proportions and infamous reputation) to have on site several reel-to-reel tape drives for them to test with. This was as late as 2008.
Good grief!
Start stop, start stop, spin, spin, start stop, start stop, etc, etc.
You are so right, that people are not adequately preserving picture (and video) content for the ages. Even if people print some content on home inkjet printers, the printed copies will not hold up well after a decade or two. Much better to have them printed by a professional service to standard photo paper.
As for digital content, make several copies, stored in different safe locations. Doesn't make sense to have multiple copies all in the same house, that could be lost due to bad circumstances. A friend of mine lost her home in the San Bruno gas explosion (one of the first three to burn) and all her personal memorabilia of her parents and family were lost. Even her safe melted and burned and all contents lost. Get a relative to hold a copy.
If floppy disks were good enough for the Thomas Jefferson administration, they should be good enough for the Barack Obama administration. It’s racist to expect more of Obama.
If I had to guess, I'd say their document management system isn't setup for that. and they would probably have to do a mega millions systems upgrade.
Converting digital hi rez photos to silver based black & white photos would be the stuff. But sadly it is rare that digital photos are of that quality.
It’s silly, I know. But I doubt that requiring the government to modernize will, in any way, advance the cause of liberty.
Too bad there aren't faster scanners. Maybe there are.
It probably won't make a difference in a thousand years any way. Maybe even 200 years or three or four or five generations.
Also, for all of those amateur photographers — group family photos and photos of people and family pets are what are interesting to future generations. The hundreds of shots of flowers and scenery get tossed the trash.
Pretty much the same thing goes for CDs and floppies.. Flash drives and SD cards are just another portable media. I guess paranoia will leave some folks back in the 80s for decades to come. Frankly, I think flash drives rock, as their capacities are only getting higher and higher to meet modern data demands.
Then they should post their public key, so people can encrypt documents to send to them. This is not rocket science.
I have an old (related) Aerosmith song going through my head right now. I really shouldn't. This is Advent and I should be having better thoughts than that.
Thanks.
Thanks a lot.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.