Home > Uncategorized > Cost ratio for bespoke hardware+software

Cost ratio for bespoke hardware+software

What percentage of the budget for a bespoke hardware/software system is spent on software, compared to hardware?

The plot below has become synonymous with this question (without the red line, which highlights 1973), and is often used to claim that software costs are many times more than hardware costs.

USAF bespoke hardware/Software cost ratio from 1955 to 1980.

The paper containing this plot was published in 1973 (the original source is a Rome period report), and is an extrapolation of data I assume was available in 1973, into what was then the future. The software and hardware costs are for bespoke command and control systems delivered to the U.S. Air Force, not commercial off-the-shelf solutions or even bespoke commercial systems.

Does bespoke software cost many times more than the hardware it runs on?

I don’t have any data that might be used to answer this questions, to any worthwhile degree of accuracy. I know of situations where I believe the bespoke software did cost a lot more than the hardware, and I know of some where the hardware cost more (I have never been privy to exact numbers on large projects).

Where did the pre-1973 data come from?

The USAF funded the creation of lots of source code, and the reports cite hardware and software figures from 1972.

To summarise: the above plot is for USAF spending on bespoke command and control hardware and software, and is extrapolated from 1973 into the future.

Categories: Uncategorized Tags: , ,
  1. D H
    October 7, 2019 02:24 | #1

    It really depends on the application. I have seen many new systems get developed in the past decade. For some, dozens of person-years are spent developing custom software that will run on a few pieces of commodity hardware. For others, software development is limited to custom settings in an industrial controller, making it a small fraction of the hardware manufacturing budget.

    It is possible that DoD acquisitions planning would be improved if they collected development and sustainment metrics broken down by categories such as system engineering, software development, and hardware manufacturing. It is perhaps more likely that these metrics would be misused by people who don’t understand what the current program needs. Procedure can’t replace skill and experience.

  2. October 7, 2019 16:24 | #2

    @D H
    The DoD does collect data, but I don’t know if it is detailed enough to support good enough analysis. Yes, there is always somebody who will misuse metrics.

  3. Nemo
    October 21, 2019 23:07 | #3

    I agree with D H and would add that in 1973, most military h/w was bespoke.

  1. No trackbacks yet.