| By Joseph Ottinger | Article Rating: |
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| August 1, 2003 12:00 AM EDT | Reads: |
16,547 |
Chaos. Anthropomorphically speaking, it wants to go everywhere.
Order. It wants to be everywhere too, and is willing to fight chaos to do it.
Michael Moorcock used to write lots of fundamentally depressing books about this very idea, and you can see it everywhere today politically speaking, in the U.S. You have order being imposed as much as is possible on a culture that tends to thrive on chaos; more relevant to this magazine, you have industry standards trying to make sure that everyone marches in straight lines, while rogue coders (so to speak!) spend time writing marvelous, new code underground.
Both sides are good; innovative solutions tend to come initially from the chaotic underground, and tested solutions tend to grow out of the orderly standards bodies taking the new solution and rigorously smacking it about until it's able to handle real load. The concept comes from beneath, and the validity of the concept nearly always comes from the office.
Unfortunately, both sides tend to view the other with suspicion. The ones who chant "standards! standards!" are corporate stooges, to the bazaar-based bunch; likewise, the madding crowd is viewed as a set of subversive, rogue elements by those wearing ties. Neither group trusts the other, and often both groups insist that the opposition isn't necessary.
It's important for us to remember that chaos exists within the framework of order, or else we can't recognize what it is likewise, order stifles creativity and we need creativity right now.
This can be applied by using software and participating in the process. For us, that means that people who understand the standards would benefit from using open software and modifying it to comply with what the industry requires. The open software authors likewise need to understand that standards exist for a reason, that there's a benefit to them. That's already somewhat in place remember when there used to be shouting matches over where to place brackets? You still have that every now and then, but there's a common standard that's dominating now, so the fights over code format are sporadic and short. That sort of scenario can play itself out in how code works, too, just like it has played out in how code is formatted.
Of course, if everyone decides to only play by the rules, then creativity is stifled. I'd rather this not happen, obviously. It's important to see new ways of doing things, even if only so they can be rejected. Consider object databases, which are excellent solutions for some vertical applications; when your domain is limited to those applications and your assumptions can be applied, they're great! (Look at Prevayler and its claims of incredible speed.) However, the assumptions can be nasty; object databases can be crippling if you need to process the data from a language that doesn't represent objects the same way. (Consider a COBOL program trying to modify a Prevayler dataset. It can be done, to be sureSbut let's just say that most people would rather gnaw off their own neck first.)
Yet, it's still important to have these tools. You'll certainly find solutions that are vertical enough to use these products well and provide a reason for their existence. Who knows, maybe their authors or users will find a way to bridge the conceptual divide and make the products more generically useful and take over, but the "generically useful" aspect will almost always come from larger, organized bodies imposing a structure over what the products do and how.
Published August 1, 2003 Reads 16,547
Copyright © 2003 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
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More Stories By Joseph Ottinger
I am a software evangelist for GigaSpaces technologies, as well as a writer and musician. I've been the editor-in-chief of Java Developer's Journal and TheServerSide.
GigaSpaces Technologies is a leading provider of a new generation of application platforms for Java and .Net environments that offer an alternative to traditional application-servers. The company's eXtreme Application Platform (XAP) is a high-end application server, designed to meet the most demanding business requirements in a cost-effective manner. It is the only product that provides a complete middleware solution on a single, scalable platform. XAP is trusted by Fortune 100 companies, which leverage it as a strategic solution that enhances efficiency and agility across the IT organization.
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Keeney 08/11/03 02:06:01 PM EDT | |||
Here goes some heavy theory... Think of chaos and order as a spectrum of information. At the chaos extreme information is immediately created but never preserved at the order extreme information is preserved forever but new information is never created. Natural systems are fundamentally chaotic. Any predictability comes from the fact that systems tend to be self reinforcing and therefore create strange attractors which maintain their persistence unless perturbations are extreme. So the earth is the earth until an earthquake and a river is a river until a flood. The development environment follows these patterns (exasperatingly so). So for those who have been working for awhile we are still wondering why XSLT is so primitive as to not have data types or non-static variables. This kind of reverse progress is the natural outcome of the upheaval caused by the introduction of the internet which is based upon the "everything text" metaphor. We shifted from one strange attractor to another. The underlying forces remained the same (get data, manipulate data, display data) but the mechanisms that enabled the functioning changed. Therefore I think it is best to think of the development push forward as the constant force and standards as temporary contraints placed upon the system to mediate information exchange. In as much as the standard enables this exchange effectively it shall remain persistent. And once established the persistence may exceed all reasonable expectation of it's survival even in the face of clearly superior enabling opportunities (thus the world domination of windows outlasts the efficacy of its development simply because it is easier to fight than switch.) Significant change does nto take place until there is a significant failure in the system to thrive. One other lesson of importance from the field of chaos is that the more mature a system become the more sophisticated is symbiotic relationships and the more resistant to change. It takes devestating catastrophes to destroy an entire forest ecosystem once the system has been established. What we have now that is interesting is a proliferation of standards to fill certain vacuums and the eventual preeminance of some standards will be based entirely upon the size of it's following at the point where the market decision is made. Research indicates that the decision point is almost entirely random. Thus VHS, a technically inferior winner. So, if I may say so, we should all be careful bemoaning the onslaught of chaos since it is the foundation of everything and to believe otherwise is the conceit of the foolish. |
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Jesse Aalberg 08/08/03 09:01:27 AM EDT | |||
sweet! It's not often I get to read about Java AND Michael Moorcock! |
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