this post was submitted on 21 Aug 2024
97 points (99.0% liked)
Space
8669 readers
121 users here now
Share & discuss informative content on: Astrophysics, Cosmology, Space Exploration, Planetary Science and Astrobiology.
Rules
- Be respectful and inclusive.
- No harassment, hate speech, or trolling.
- Engage in constructive discussions.
- Share relevant content.
- Follow guidelines and moderators' instructions.
- Use appropriate language and tone.
- Report violations.
- Foster a continuous learning environment.
Picture of the Day
The Busy Center of the Lagoon Nebula
Related Communities
π Science
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
π Engineering
π Art and Photography
Other Cool Links
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Private companies competing for things ends up with stuff like this. Unless NASA or someone designs a spec and contractually enforces everyone to implement it, problems like this can crop up in all kinds of places.
In most fields, even private companies understand the need for industry standards.
And in new fields of privatization, someone has to win out on the standard. It should have been NASA demanding an interoperable spec but someone will win out here eventually and it will be standard in the future.
XLCD: Standards
When you make a new standard to consolidate related-but-drifting standards, all youβve done is make n+1 standards.
Ah yes, XLCD, created by Rbndall Mvnroe.
Yeah, like how Apple works with other phone and tablet manufacturers to use a unified charging and data port.
I canβt tell if this is sarcastic because Apple contributed over 20% of the engineers credited with developing USB-C.
It's sarcasm, because it took EU legislation to force them to actually fucking use it in their phones a decade later.
They don't contribute engineers out of the kindness of their hearts. They do it for entirely selfish reasons β to have a large influence in industry standards, and the competitive advantages that enables.
Do you also believe Google created Chrome for "freedom", instead of to gain a competitive advantage in web and ad tech standards?
Do you believe any for-profit entity give two shits about anything except for profit? Oh, that's right, the one you like/work for is different.
In what universe was my comment promoting any for-profit? Are you mentally deficient?
Why do you think any "privatized" entity does anything? Altruism? Charity?
Only when it's their standard most of the time, which is the reason why we have so many standards for so many things that do basically the same thing
And that's why we have the EU telling apple and their fanboys to eat shit and use USB-C :) without these legislators we get the chaos you mention
For consumer products I don't agree with enforcing it through the beginning though as it might hinder innovation. But once you have a few working cases you enforce the better one