26
- Obsolescence
The
never ending stream of new and more powerful software and hardware in
the computer industry is often exemplified for how fast things change
when not 'hampered' by standards, is to most users actually very frustrating.
Anyone familiar with computer hardware and software knows the endless
cycle of planned obsolescence common in the computer industry. New versions
of software every two years or so, and you are forced to buy in order
to read files with the new format. Likewise the new software requires
more and more powerful processors and memory forcing purchase of new
hardware. This can mean financial loss on equipment superseded by the
latest-and-greatest model.
With
standards this constant 'tweaking' disappears. Standards are updated
when there is significant improvements to justify change, instead making
giant leap of technical perfection every ten years or so.
Field
device manufacturers are relived form man-machine interfaces like configuration
and supervisory software. Software houses that are specialists on this
can make these. The later are also relived from never ending development
of communication driver for each and every protocol.
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