US State Dept. Loses Anti-Terrorist Program Laptops 223
Stony Stevenson writes "It has surfaced that the US State Department can't account for up to about 1,000 laptops, perhaps as many as 400 of which belonged to the department's Anti-Terrorism Assistance Program. Internal auditors found that the department lost track of $30 million worth of computer equipment, 'the vast majority of which... perhaps as much as 99 percent,' were laptops, according to one official. Another official calculated that the average State Department laptop costs US$3,000 and figured that meant as many as 1,000 laptops might be astray — not 10,000 laptops as the US$30 million figure suggests. They're obviously not very good at maths."
Blame Iran (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Blame Iran (Score:5, Funny)
In Soviet America (Score:3, Funny)
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They're using them and a bunch of XBoxes to create a supercomputer possible of calculating what wacky thing the president is going to do next.
Bogus -- no computer is capable of calculating THAT irrationally.....
XBoxes? (Score:2)
the XBoxes are running a modified version of Windows ME that is running Microsoft Bob in an emulator.
When they come out with the Vista version they will be able to model the behavior of Congress.
By using the most irrational OS it is easy to emulate the politician's irrational behavior.
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How many Ferrari.... (Score:2)
I mean, seriously
Who they want to fool?
Why don't they handcuff the laptops to the users? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Why don't they handcuff the laptops to the user (Score:3, Insightful)
My solution would be to chain the employees to a welded down desktop so the whole building would have to be lost/misplaced/sold in a pawn shop.
After seeing SO many of these articles, I can only surmise that giving them laptops in the first place is a poor choice.
great... (Score:2)
your multi-billion dollar system is rendered useless by one incompetent employee.
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eBay? (Score:5, Funny)
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damn
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I'd try employee house visits.
Math issues resolved (Score:5, Funny)
The other $29,001,000 is due to the loss of one laptop containing the SSN and medical records of the director of the Department of Homeland Security.
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Clearly there's only one thing left to do... (Score:3, Funny)
Nah. (Score:2)
Filed away accidentally? (Score:5, Funny)
$3000 for a laptop?? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:$3000 for a laptop?? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:$3000 for a laptop?? (Score:5, Informative)
I presume that price includes software, created by government contractors at high price for a specific purpose, divided amongst the few thousand computers that have it installed.
Software would be a part of the purchase price, but not the calculation of the value of the lost property.
After all, software is licensed not bought. When a computer gets lost, they still have the license, right? It's not like they have repurchase the same software for the replacement computers.
Re:$3000 for a laptop?? (Score:5, Insightful)
Haven't dealt with Microsoft lately, have we?
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It depends who does the calculations (Score:2)
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Re:$3000 for a laptop?? (Score:4, Interesting)
An ultraslick teflon outer coating to prevent the employees from writing down their automatically generated 16 letter+capital+number+special changing once a month passwords on sticky notes and glue them to the notebook.
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Re:$3000 for a laptop?? (Score:5, Interesting)
If you got all of your money by stealing it from people, I don't think you would care too much about wasting some of that money.
In government, where is the incentive to not waste money?
MOD PARENT UP (Score:4, Insightful)
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You are correct. In some cases. But only a blind fool would believe that's universally true.
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You think corporate employees don't get their jobs through friends and family or cronyism? There are efficient government run systems.
The problem is not "because it is done by government". It all depends on the people you have, it doesn't matter if it's "private or gov". Some stuff governments just do better than private corps. The idea is governments try not to do too much stuff that they're not good at, and regulate the private corps (esp
Broken Window Fallacy (Score:5, Insightful)
You are saying "it is ok to steal from people if that money is going to be used to buy other things", right?
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Re:$3000 for a laptop?? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:$3000 for a laptop?? (Score:5, Interesting)
Where I work, we are very budget conscious. We could never justify spending $3000 on laptops. In fact we have to make a very solid case before we can get our desktops upgraded to even modern commodity levels (despite the fact that, as you might guess, we do plenty of work that pushes a desktop machine to its limits). Moreover, we have a very strict inventory system. All equipment (including computers) is accounted for, and has to be barcode-scanned annually to make sure it's still accounted for. Even computers that are so old no one would want them are still meticulously tracked.
I always assumed that this was standard for government agencies... but I guess some agencies are able to bend and break these rules more wantonly than others. It makes me sad to think of the wastage in one branch when we are diligently following the rules, and barely scraping by, in another...
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Uh, no noise at all since the XO laptops don't have fans?
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Itronix and Panasonic semi-rugged and rugged units routinely cost far more than that.
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A state department laptop costs an average of $3000? That's completely insane!
I'm not sure I'd start jumping up and down just yet. You're basing this all one one minor fact that some dumb journalist likely got wrong, or took out of context. And as we all know, journalists never make factual errors except when you have personal knowledge of the story.
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Re:$3000 for a laptop?? (Score:4, Informative)
Ok, buy a laptop. Put the most popular business OS on it. Put the most popular business office suite on it. Put "standard" software on it, Acrobat, virus scanner, CALs for email, SQL, and such. Now look at the cost. Having bought a number of computers for companies, the hardware costs $500-$1000 for the desktop, and $2000+ after all the software. And yes, they essentially throw out all the licenses when they get rid of the computer, but by then the software is usally obsolete as well. Not to mention that a laptop order here is usually for someone "special" with special needs. With the cost of the one laptop was an extra battery, an extra charger, a monitor, a stand, a dock, a case, a mouse, a keyboard (invariably wireless) and sometimes even things like printers. The "laptop" was half accessories or more.
So when they "cost" $3000, that's probably not the cost of the hardware laptop only, but includes other expenses.
It's simple supply and demand (Score:3, Informative)
I don't know which MBA came up with that concept, but there you go.
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The more people you can eliminate near the beginning of the bidding process, the fewer are left to complain about the (perceived or actual) lack of fairness in the rest of it.
Where to find the thieves (Score:2)
Sorry, had to do it.
Oops, my bad (Score:2)
I smoked a joint and got all paranoid and shit and threw it in Lake Springfield. Sorry.
Things to keep in mind... (Score:5, Interesting)
2) The reason that many of these laptops are listed as worth ~$3,000 is probably that some of them are 10+ years old (when laptops were really really expensive). That also explains why some of them can't be found; they're shoved in the back of filing cabinets or in the bottom of desk-drawers because they haven't been used in years and years. Their practical value is probably nothing, but -- on paper -- they're worth thousands because that's what they were bought for all those years ago...
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Well, first off, the US government doesn't comply with GAAP across the board, it picks and chooses where it wants to comply. There's plenty of questionable accounting practices, despite efforts to clean it up (see GAO annual report).
And as for ten-year-old laptops, while it's
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Unless there's a reason to suspect t
Papertrails (Score:4, Interesting)
What in the world happens with these things as far as papertrails go? This question comes to mind every time they "lose" weapons or laptops. Isn't there anyone that has their name on these items as being responsible? Surely either the shipping departments, the departments that they were assigned to, or the people that they were assigned to could be held responsible right?
I imagine for example that in moving of large arms shipments around the Middle East for our troops that there's someone always in charge of the stuff, or that last touched it. Wouldn't a great place to start (and place the blame) be the last person that signed off on something like this? In anything bigger than a really tiny company, there should be very clear paper trails like this right?
Doesn't someone have to answer? Isn't it the auditors job to know who last touched them?
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Well, if you are stoopid enough to place your ballistic missile parts in the unclassified storage room, and then accid [cnn.com]
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Where I work, we have an elaborate tracking system. Every piece of equipment has an inventory number and a barcode. We have to reconcile the inventory at least yearly, which involves people walking around and scanning in each item. Any missing items (or even relocated items) have to be found. There is a special procedure for throwing out any tracked item. The whole system is actually a bit of a pain, but stories like this make me realize why these inven
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Re:Paper trails (Score:2)
Anyway, I remember years ago, him telling me about all the extra/unused computer equipment they had sitting in storage, on-site. There was a lot of "office politics" going on all the time, where somebody in charge would "mandate" that the whole division use a specific operating system version, or specific version
My view (Score:2)
So in a case like this accountability isn't built into the system. The powers that oversee them are themselves.
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Ever heard of the My Lai massacre?
Government accounting (Score:5, Funny)
Cost of personnel to procure it, insurance, shipping, paperwork, legislation, research, etc on a per-item basis: $8000
Total cost in taxes, per laptop, to you: $11000
Cost of laptop, out of back of 10-year-old SUV with motor running, on street, from some guy named Joey with methamphetamine acne: $400
Re:Government accounting (Score:5, Funny)
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Cost of personnel to procure it, insurance, shipping, paperwork, legislation, research, etc on a per-item basis: $8000
Total cost in taxes, per laptop, to you: $11000
Cost of laptop, out of back of 10-year-old SUV with motor running, on street, from some guy named Joey with methamphetamine acne: $400
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We need new Math Textbooks (Score:4, Funny)
9/11 changed everything... even multiplication.
The should buy their own fucking laptops (Score:2)
More stupid gov spending.
Beowulf Cluster? (Score:2)
I see, someone started... (Score:2)
RTF-Source-Article for this to make sense (Score:2, Informative)
The $30M number is bogus, it includes a lot of other stuff.
This whole article is sourced from a blog called "Dead Men Working" which is focused on venting the frustrations diplomatic foreign service officers about their problems with getting security clearance from the Bureau of Diplomatic Security; coincidentally the group alleged to have lost the laptops. So take the article with a grain of salt.
Also, the blog reported yesterday that the laptops were all found and accounted for. So, really, nothing
is govt worse then priv sector (Score:2)
but is gov't really worse then priv sector ? don't forget, priv sector isn't under the openess rules of gov't a corp looses a 1,000 laptops, they don't talk about it.
What i have seen in industry, there is just as much waste, if not more.
Slow down there cowboy... (Score:2)
Give the major suspects a computer and a WoW account and they won't have time to design bombs....
And talk about no meat to the article
US$30 million (Score:2)
Base cost of the box is not total cost of the unit.
And this.. (Score:2)
To find their missing stuff again!
Quote of the day (Score:2)
Sorry, I RTFA.
The 'sensitive data'... (Score:3, Funny)
Solution: (Score:2)
This is so unfair (Score:2)
This is an important security matter; how would you like to be the guy having to explain to George W. that a burnt out rental car that had been hir
They were found yesterday (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:$3000? (Score:5, Interesting)
Yep sounds like my old company of 20 people doing contracts for the government. The President and VP co owned the company... guess who was the president: the minority woman. Guess who did most of the contact establishment, contract negotiation, and assembled the technical know how, and basically ran the company... the white bread male VP. She was useless, and started to get bitter when she began to realize this. Not saying this is a reflection of her nationality or sex, just that she was nothing more than a figurehead for the company so we could get more contracts.
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"just that she was nothing more than a figurehead for the company so we could get more contracts"
If that meant you actually got more contracts then she was not useless at all.
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I mean, how many ex politicians become CEOs as figureheads because their names are well known, and spend their days flying to exotic locations for "meetings" and sampling the flight stewardess' thighs.
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Aren't you glad we're supporting small, disadvantaged, minority, woman-owned businesses at the cost of your (and my) tax dollars?
I wasn't aware that Lockheed Martin [lockheedmartin.com] was a minority owned business.
To quote from their PR materials: Lockheed Martin is the largest provider of IT services, systems integration, and training to the U.S. Government. [...] with approximately $21.4 billion in 2007 sales.
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http://www.eds.com/sites/nmci/ [eds.com]
You'd think that this would come with a certain amount of priced-in tech support, but that all costs extra, too. The whole system is a giant POS that doesn't do what the Navy really needs and still costs the taxpayers three times what it would be worth even if it did work right. Government contracts being what they are, I'd imagine that any other federal agency would pay si
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