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Military Enlists Open Source Community
Posted by
samzenpus
on Mon Apr 27, 2009 05:15 PM
from the freedom-is-free dept.
from the freedom-is-free dept.
jmwci1 writes "The US Defense Department is enlisting an open source approach to software development — an about-face for such a historically top-down organization. In recent weeks, the military has launched a collaborative platform called Forge.mil for its developers to share software, systems components and network services. The agency also signed an agreement with the Open Source Software Institute to allow 50 internally developed workforce management applications to be licensed to other government agencies, universities and companies."
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I Dunno (Score:5, Funny)
This could end badly. Here's all these geeks working hard at coding, only to be interrupted by one of their own doing a mock-Python "Stop the skit! This is much too silly." and then everyone doing the "military fairy" song.
The Pentagon may not survive.
Re: (Score:2)
Look on the bright side. Now that the new administration has banned 'not *quite* torture', they'll need something to get the alleged nutjobs to confess.
Obscure geek Python parodies would surely crack even the most hardened Talib.
Re: (Score:2)
Haven't we already decided these terrorists are not enemy combatants? In which case, let the jokes fly!
Wish this was there 3 years ago (Score:5, Informative)
I wish they had this three years ago. I worked on the ULLS-G system, which is a software system for unit-level logistics. It was written in ADA and ran in DOS. It was a horribly non-intuitive system. Trying to do anything with it took ages. There wasn't any sort of batch feature to batch up commands or reports.
The software used the SAGE database format and I was able to find an ODBC driver for it. Using that, I was able to write Perl scripts that could read and write to the database and do things a whole lot faster. I mean, things that took 2 hours to do (manually), took less than a second now. I was also able to tie things into Excel for extremely accurate and fast reporting. Something that none of the units there were able to do.
I was actually supposed to do any of this, because only authorized personnel are allowed to modify the software (reason being they didn't want anyone to mess things up). However, my commander and the BMO (Battalion Maintenance Officer) kinda let me do what I wanted to do because I was providing results.
Now they have a new system in place that's a whole lot better. Something with an Oracle backend. Not sure what the front-end is actually built on. Looks like access, but might not be it.
Anytay, at the time I really wanted to provide the scripts and software that I had written to other people in the military - either people who had my MOS or at the very least, the developers, so that they could improve the software.
I haven't had that much of an opportunity to work with the new software. Also, I'm getting done with my contract in December (end to 9 years of service). But I think there are a bunch of nerds and geeks like me hiding out in the military and I'm sure they have some pretty good suggestions to improve the software that the military uses.
Parent
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Should have mentioned. The reason this would have helped 3 years ago is that I was in Iraq at the time, which is where I extensively used the ULLS-G system.
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Oh. My. God.
STILL using Ada because it is specified in the contracts by default and no one has the sense to ask for anything else. Fifteen years ago our contractor had to send people to school to learn it in order to support the contract. Still using MS-DOS probably for the same reason. I worked on a little training system that ran on PC's and I made sure the DOS licenses were were stored under the floor boards so that they would never get lost. We had to have them in case we ever got inspected and Lo
How dare they? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:How dare they? (Score:5, Interesting)
No Joke. In 2001 the US Marine Corps disbanded the 4067 MOS. While we used to have Marines, in uniform, writing code for a wide assortment of tasks (from menial office apps to classified COM vaults and even some flight system work in ADA), we moved to consultants.
Replacing a $14,400/year Corporal with a $120,000 civilian. One who doesn't have to take an oath to support and defend the Constitution.
-Rick
Parent
Re:How dare they? (Score:5, Funny)
What does mil-spec code look like? Do you have to put //SIR! after every semicolon?
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Since ADA was the language created for military code, mil-spec code looks a lot like an ADA program. Design by contract, for one thing.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Since ADA was the language created for military code, mil-spec code looks a lot like an ADA program. Design by contract, for one thing.
GDSS-2 [af.mil] is written in VB6.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I get the impression that you think this is an awful shame. Do you think we need programmers that take an oath to support and defend the Constitution? Do you think programmers need to maintain the high standards of fitness required by the Marines? I guarantee you that wearing a uniform makes it harder to code (it's much easier in flip flops and shorts).
It's unlikely that those civilians are actually paid $120k, but you're right that they make more than $14k. I think that (in many cases) it's an awful
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
However, the Defense Contractor that hired him for $80,000 is getting $120,000 for doing so (and providing his health insurance and, well, that's about it.)
Do Programmers HAVE to sign and swear in order to program? no.
However, considering the quality of some of the software that the military has to use, it would be VERY useful to have trained programmers rotating into and out of positions where they are using it in the field, and than updating and maintai
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So a principle of open source coding allows the DOD to do one thing particularly well, review the code of likely job applicants. Obviously should you submit high quality code, as they likely shift to a 50:50 split (internal:external) coding, they will look to employ you directly
This also allows for coding inputs of allied countries and even some not so allied countries. Dual benefit there is, the are establishing friendlier and more open and communicative ties with other countries (repair some of the dam
Re:How dare they? (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
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Hell yeah. That's the very reason why the Marine Corps still has it's own air wing.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
It is a damn shame. I was on the other side of the fence and I can tell you, it's a lot harder to get something done when you've got to ask/beg a civilian to do something for you. He doesn't care what the 1stSgt told you to do, he's not in the chain of command.
Or even worse, the civilian in charge of our local network was a high ranking civilian. He actually had more on-base clout than our regiment's CO. It took *months* to get network jacks opened, forget about adding new devices. Buying an fscking printer
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Do you think we need programmers that take an oath to support and defend the Constitution?
Next time someone runs into a critical fault in a COM shack in the south Pacific, see what the response time is getting a civilian in Virginia out of bed, into the office, and working on the problem as opposed to having a trained and proficient Marine on site to fix the issue.
Do you think programmers need to maintain the high standards of fitness required by the Marines? I guarantee you that wearing a uniform makes it harder to code (it's much easier in flip flops and shorts).
There are benefits and detractors. On the benefit side, coding standards are non-optional. There is room for variety, but if there is one thing you get used to in the Marine Corps, it is standards. Also, as a coder in the MC you get to
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Next time someone runs into a critical fault in a COM shack in the south Pacific...
And what, pray tell, does a guy in a COM shack in the South Pacific have to do with defending the Constitution?
Defending the American Empire, yeah. The Constitution... not so much.
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Don't you love how Washington thinks?
Re:How dare they? (Score:5, Interesting)
On one Air Force base that I was stationed, it was very common for a company (usually Lockheed Martin) to "convince" the military that a certain position would be better served by a civilian contractor. It was just mere coincidence that the military person currently occupying that job just happened to be within early retirement age and that, even more coincidentally, he would be the one hired by the contractor to fill the civilian position after the military position was closed.
Eventually, entire portions of the base were run by civilians (civil engineering, the supply chain, avionics shops, test equipment maintenance, and vehicle management and maintenance are only a few that I recall off the top of my head) and the only military members that were left were those that legally couldn't be replaced by a contractor because they would be needed if the unit were to deploy anywhere.
I don't think most Slashdotters realize how big/powerful/corrupt the entire defense contracting industry really is.
Parent
Re:How dare they? (Score:4, Informative)
I knew one person I considered evil while I was in the Marine Corps.
He got the big chicken dinner.
Turns out, he's from my home town and I've managed to bump into him entirely too many times over the last 8 years.
I knew a fair number of dicks, epen flexers, power trippers, hazers, and douche bags. But every one of them was absolutely dedicated to country and corps and would put it all on the line for a Marine in trouble.
-Rick
Parent
Repost anyone? (Score:5, Informative)
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Yeah, but since the military have published (on about this scale) GPLed and BSDed source code for decades, was it news even then?
New Mascot (Score:3)
Why is it that every time I hear about the Military and Open Source, I have visions of Tux wearing a green helmet, holding an M16, and baring a grin with a fat cigar?
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In other news, there is also this [wikimedia.org] -- which I have also seen many times.
Military Eggheads did not think put the domain up. (Score:2, Informative)
Project "forge.mil" is only to be found at the url http://www.disa.mil/forge/ [disa.mil]
The address forge.mil is unavailable as of now.
Either does not exist, or has been taken over by the Chinese/Russians, or it has been slashdotted, or it runs on Windows.
Any of the above, is not a good sign.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
It's all of the above. However, this is not a bad thing. Here's why:
1) the Russians and Chinese may have access to secrets vital to our national security, but we don't really need to worry because the Russians and Chinese are really only interested in supplementing their GDP with income from US military super-computer bot nets... this is a much more valuable industry than espionag
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> 1) the Russians and Chinese may have access to secrets vital to our national security
Notice that China is on the radar (so to speak) for our Navy; witness the inclusion of The Great Wall at Sea [militarypr...glists.com] on the Navy reading list [militarypr...glists.com].
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There are DNS records for it, so it is supposed to exist.
Re:Military Eggheads did not think (Score:2)
FTA
One example of the Defense Department's new community-based approach to software development is Forge.mil, which was made generally available for unclassified use within the department in April.
So, unless you're at a terminal in the DoD, it's probably not gonna work for you.
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Works here.
It redirects to http://www.disa.mil/forge/ [disa.mil] which is working fine
Kids (Score:5, Informative)
an about-face for such a historically top-down organization
See the guy in the photo [wikipedia.org] using BRL-CAD to optimize the M1 Abrams battle tank for crushing innocent Iraqi children? He wrote ping, contributed to BIND and other stuff. Go read some RFCs, early ones in particular, and note the number of .mil domains credited and try to imagine how many millions of lines of code made it from those reference implementations into BSD.
The DOD, particularly through DARPA, has been giving away code longer than most of you have been alive. Please, for the love of fuck, stow your naive preconceptions. You don't know what the hell you're talking about.
Re:Kids (Score:5, Insightful)
This goes WAY beyond source code. DoD and DARPA have been giving away technology of all varieties for ages. Radar, guidance systems, tons of computing and communications tech, medical technology. Bitch about the military all ya want...but be honest...stop using everything the military has played key role in building. For starters no computers, no internet, no weather reports, no flying, and certainly no trauma treatment in an ER anywhere...
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Think again: works prepared by employees of the U.S. government are uncopyrightable. [wikipedia.org] And that's how it should be. You don't want to give billions of taxpayer money to a military organization and have nothing to show for it.
Even if they wanted to, the military would have to open source their code and published documents, unless they can figure out a sneaky way to bypass the letter of the law
It might work (Score:4, Insightful)
sudo apt-get install us-friendly-dictator
sudo apt-get autoremove reporters-who-ask-the-wrong-questions
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sudo apt-get autoremove takes no arguments.
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sudo apt-get remove head-from-anus
Bug #222896: App terminates with big explosion (Score:4, Funny)
Bogus: This issue was fixed in SVN 2 months ago.
Navy has done this for years. (Score:4, Interesting)
Way back when, I would access the Naval Research Lab's websites for copies of OPIE (a one-time password suite), their IPSec code, their IPv6 code and their IPv4/IPv6 multiprotocol suite.
These days, they have some nice stuff [navy.mil] in the areas of multicasting, wireless routing and network testing tools.
Even the DoD's Office of Information Security Research [mit.edu] has done Open Source work before, publishing one of the early IPSec implementations publicly through MIT.
So other than the DoD finally putting onto a more official level a practice that has been commonplace for decades (the sharing of source under true open source licenses), what exactly is new here? That the politicians at the top of the food chain figured something out? That's just a freak event, a result of the statistical nature of quantum mechanics.
Boot camp for geeks (Score:2)
"Now drop and give me 0x20!"
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"Now drop and give me 0x20!"
Shouldn't that be 0x14 ?
Which just goes to show you, life is always easier in hex!
What's the license? (Score:2)
"An Open Source license" isn't very specific. What's the license?
If they're proposing GPL3 then it's interesting. If they're proposing MSPL (or whatever that MS license is is called) then I can't see many people bothering. Each license has it's own community, and it makes a lot of difference which one they choose.
Or are they just going to host a site for projects? If so, what's the criteria for being hosted? Especially, what languages and licenses do they accept? (Google and SourceForge have shown tha
Forge Mill (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyway- i'd say its a good idea. I don't think they'd use it for anything mission critical, like jet fighter software. Only windows 98 cuts the cake for that kind of high tech business.
Its a step forward, and its free, so why not?
i knew it (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Why does this story have a red header? (Score:5, Funny)
It WAS that is.
Until you de-redified it.
Parent
Re: (Score:2)
http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/02/01/1259203
Still, it's open source and the DoD - what's not to like?
Dupe!! [slashdot.org]
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In fairness, they posted a minute apart.
If his browser works like the one I use then there is a 2 minute wait when you click preview and another 2 minute wait when you click submit.
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You've gotta point. However, I seriously seriously seriously doubt this guy checked the other posts before declaring it a dupe.
I will concede, though, that I'm being unfair to him in particular.