(El toot anterior va de mi movida sobre preguntar cómo están programadas las maquinitas de billetes de autobús: https://ivan.sanchezortega.es/politics/2026/04/15/caso-bosco-y-billetes-de-autobus.html )
Leyendo la newsletter (sólo para socios) de @civio y echando la vista atrás a mi carrera profesional, lo único que puedo hacer es responder con un meme.
Hoy me toca aplicar el Principio de Hanlon ( https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principio_de_Hanlon ) a los burócratas de la Comunidad de Madrid.
A ver, si yo le pedí cosas al Consorcio Regional de Transportes de Madrid amparándome en ley 19/2013, no me vengáis preguntándome que qué le pedí a la […]
Un #haplauso para los burócratas de la Comunidad de Madrid que se aseguran de que los enlaces están en azul y subrayados.... en las comunicaciones en papel.
Iván Sánchez Ortega
Iván Sánchez Ortega
I've written a thing titled "I once ate whale meat".
It's not about whales.
https://ivan.sanchezortega.es/politics/2026/06/09/whale-meat.html
Iván Sánchez Ortega
Iván Sánchez Ortega
Oh great, so my local ISP has started blocking port 51820 for no apparent reason (although I suspect the ongoing soccer thingie)
cc @mullvadnet
Iván Sánchez Ortega
RE: https://climatejustice.social/@ketan/116714456576849745
Each time I see this "diagram", I'm instantly reminded of this classic paper:
https://isotropic.org/papers/chicken.pdf
Lo-fi video version:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yL_-1d9OSdk
#Anthropic #ClaudeAllTheWayDown
Iván Sánchez Ortega
Y aquí vemos la discriminación institucional en acción: si no puedes tener tarjeta personal, no puedes comprar abonos de transporte.
#Madrid #movilidad #transporte #noticias […]
Iván Sánchez Ortega
Excellent news from Australia.
https://www.design.org.au/dianews/budget-202627-free-access-to-australian-standards-confirmed
#OpenStandards
Thiago Ferrer Morini
Karsten Schmidt
climatejustice.social
Durante bastantes meses he estado siguiendo el caso BOSCO más o menos de cerca. Tengo la opinión de que lo imporante no es que se haya ganado el caso en el S...
Tuesday night’s Federal Budget confirmed a significant reform long advocated for by the DIA and the broader construction and design sector: free access to all standards referenced in Australian legislation.
* * *
For designers across Australia, this is a major moment. For decades, practitioners have been required to purchase access to the standards governing their professional work, often at substantial cost. Interior designers, industrial designers and practitioners working across the built environment rely daily on standards relating to accessibility, safety, waterproofing, materials, lighting, ergonomics and compliance. Yet access to these essential documents has remained prohibitively expensive, particularly for sole practitioners and small studios.
This reform recognises that the standards underpinning public safety, compliance and professional practice should be accessible to the people required to use them. The DIA has consistently advocated for this change through our participation in the Australian Construction Industry Forum (ACIF), alongside broader submissions relating to National Construction Code modernisation and professional practice reform.
As outlined in our March 2026 submission to the NCC Modernisation Team, the cost of standards access has acted as a structural barrier to compliance and professional participation across the design sector. This issue is particularly significant for interior designers, a Skill Level 1 profession of approximately 19,300 practitioners nationally, who navigate Australian Standards as part of everyday practice.
**What the Budget says**
The Budget confirms that:
“The Government is also taking action to simplify building regulations and make it easier to build by providing free access to all standards referenced in Australian legislation. This will save small businesses and tradies up to $1,600 per year.”
Importantly, the scope as currently written extends beyond construction alone. It captures standards referenced in legislation more broadly, including areas relating to construction, occupational health and safety, product safety and compliance frameworks.
The reform was also directly referenced in the Treasurer’s Budget Speech as part of a broader National Competition Policy agenda aimed at strengthening Australia as a “Single National Market”.
**Why this matters**
The implications extend far beyond simple cost savings.
Free access to standards has the potential to:
* improve regulatory compliance
* strengthen professional capability
* reduce barriers for emerging practitioners and small businesses
* support safer and more consistent design outcomes
* improve accessibility to technical knowledge nationally
* strengthen productivity across the design and construction sectors
For many practices, this reform may remove thousands of dollars annually in subscription and document access costs.
Importantly, it also moves Australia away from being a significant international outlier. Many comparable economies — including New Zealand, the United Kingdom, Singapore, Canada, China, India, Japan and South Korea — already provide free or significantly lower-cost access to standards and regulatory documents.
**What happens next**
Implementation details are still emerging, and we're seeking further clarification regarding how the scheme will operate in practice.
The DIA will continue to monitor developments closely and advocate to ensure designers and allied professionals are properly considered as implementation progresses.
This is an important reminder that sustained advocacy matters — and that long-term sector engagement can shape meaningful systemic change.
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Summary - _Housing Tax Reform changes_ compiled by Nerida Conisbee, Chair of ACIF's Construction Forecasting Committee
Federal Budget 2026–27