|
NEW YORK – Affinitext is continuing dramatic expansion of FAR Online.
The new FAR Online service, which has been transforming the way businesses understand and comply with US Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR), has now been extended to include over 10,000 pages of FAR Supplements.
Any company selling to a US federal agency needs to comply with over 1,800 pages of rules in the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR). Each federal agency also has over 1,000 pages of specific requirements in their relevant FAR Supplement. These federal procurement rules affect every procurement contract and are complex and regularly updated.
For thousands of businesses that supply goods and services to US federal agencies, finding, understanding and comparing relevant clauses in these regulations has traditionally been laborious and time-consuming.
The new FAR Online service, powered by Affinitext, changes that forever with an easy to use online service with search, smart-linking between FAR, DFARS and other FAR supplements, and the ability to add private notes to refer back to next time. FAR Online has now been extended to include:
-
Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR)
-
Department of Interior Acquisition Regulation System (DIARS)
-
Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement (DFARS)
-
Army Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement (AFARS)
-
Air Force Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement (AFFARS)
-
Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) Acquisition Regulation Supplement (DARS)
-
Defense Logistics Agency Directive (DLAD)
-
Navy Marine Corps Acquisition Regulation Supplement (NMCARS)
-
US Special Operations Command FAR Supplement (USSOCOM)
-
US Transportation Command FAR Supplement (USTRANSCOM)
The Affinitext Intelligent Document Format™ (IDF™) is used worldwide in over $130 billion of major projects in defense, telecommunications, transport and construction. FAR Online applies this private sector format of choice to US Defense procurement regulations for the first time.
Suppliers and US federal procurement specialists can access http://www.faronline.com free of charge during the service’s initial beta testing period.
|