←back to thread

288 points ridruejo | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.746s | source
Show context
stackskipton ◴[] No.45893105[source]
As someone who has some familiarity with this process, just like safety regulations are written in blood, Federal Acquisition rules are written in misuse of money, sometimes criminally.

Yes, we have swung too much towards the bureaucrats but I'm not sure throwing out everything is solution to the issue.

Move fast works great when it's B2B software and failures means stock price does not go up. It's not so great when brand new jet acts up and results in crashes.

Oh yea, F-35 was built with move fast, they rolled models off the production line quickly, so Lockheed could get more money, but it looks like whole "We will fix busted models later" might have been more expensive. Time will tell.

replies(21): >>45893777 #>>45893843 #>>45893847 #>>45893934 #>>45894255 #>>45894410 #>>45894990 #>>45895591 #>>45895700 #>>45895838 #>>45896005 #>>45896219 #>>45896396 #>>45897182 #>>45897650 #>>45897842 #>>45899571 #>>45899715 #>>45899941 #>>45901076 #>>45902745 #
astrange[dead post] ◴[] No.45894255[source]
[flagged]
koolba ◴[] No.45894290[source]
> …and they're about to ban windowless bedrooms which will make office-to-housing conversions impossible.

Where is this not banned?

And it’s not like offices don’t have windows or you can’t cut them. The ban on windowless bedrooms is supposed to prevent renting out a utility closet as a “rustic studio”.

replies(1): >>45894318 #
astrange ◴[] No.45894318[source]
No, the ban is because an architect thinks they're icky, sent in a request to ban it, and the building code people take any suggestion to ban anything that anyone sends them. Safety regulations are written in blood, you know!

https://bsky.app/profile/stephenjacobsmith.com/post/3m3xpe3n...

replies(1): >>45894607 #
nradov ◴[] No.45894607[source]
The ban on windowless bedroom is at least partly about fire safety. A window provides an escape route for low floors, or a means for firefighters to rescue the occupants.
replies(3): >>45894671 #>>45894967 #>>45897917 #
1. alephnerd ◴[] No.45895090[source]
> Windows aren't used for that in the US

Yes they are, and I say this as someone who eons ago lived in a shithole apartment that had a fire scare and needed the Fire Dept to help out. Egress windows and fire trucks with ladders exist for a reason.

2. nradov ◴[] No.45895224[source]
Bullshit. Check the municipal fire code in any major US city. There are explicit requirements around using Windows for egress and fire rescue.
replies(1): >>45896628 #
3. astrange ◴[] No.45896628[source]
Windows above the first few floors. See the thread. You'd have to break into them, since they aren't required to be openable.