[ih] "how better protocols could solve those problems better"
Miles Fidelman
mfidelman at meetinghouse.net
Thu Oct 1 06:51:56 PDT 2020
On 9/30/20 9:59 PM, John Gilmore via Internet-history wrote:
> Craig Partridge <craig at tereschau.net> wrote:
>> * Naming and organizing big data. We are generating big data in many areas
>> faster than we can name it. And by "name" I don't simply mean giving
>> something a filename but creating an environment to find that name,
>> including the right metadata, and storing the data in places folks can
>> easily retrieve it. You can probably through archiving into that too (when
>> should data with this name be kept or discarded over time?). What good are
>> FTP, SCP, HTTPS, if you can't find or retrieve the data?
> The Internet Archive has this problem. I'm not the right expert to talk
> about what they've done, but I can introduce you.
>
For a long time, I've maintained that we need a new generation of
application layer protocols, for things like:
- mailing list management (it's really a routing protocol, isn't it?)
- distributed map-reduce (on beyond encoding search strings after the ?
in URLs)
- distributed process management (in the cloud, an awful lot of o/s
functions would seem better handled by protocols)
But we could start by actually fixing things like calendaring - where
the protocols exist, but nobody seems to implement them well.
Miles Fidelman
--
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
In practice, there is. .... Yogi Berra
Theory is when you know everything but nothing works.
Practice is when everything works but no one knows why.
In our lab, theory and practice are combined:
nothing works and no one knows why. ... unknown
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