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World: r3wp

[Tech News] Interesting technology

Pekr
12-Nov-2009
[4390x2]
if it would come from any other company, it would get ignored. The 
same goes for Chrome - it is in no way unique, just a rip-off of 
others, plus minus few things done differently (tasks per tab).
So you can't see it? There is no concept in google, just slow domination. 
They are either dumb enough, not having some top level gurus/designer, 
not having complete idea, or they are way too much clever - throwsing 
various things at us, slowly leading to their total domination.
BrianH
12-Nov-2009
[4392x2]
If people start getting pissed off at Google for actually having 
and using the money to fund research *which they are giving away*, 
then we are doomed. The protocol looks good so far. If it sucks, 
it should get ignored (see SOAP). If it doesn't suck, it should be 
adopted. There is no reason to give a crap about "domination" because 
Google isn't trying to control network protocols, just to improve 
them for all.


It makes sense to complain about their domination in search and advertising, 
and their kowtowing to local tyrants at times. But this is not one 
of those cases. They are giving the protocol away for free. They 
aren't tying it to a platform like MS. It is even encrypted end-to-end, 
so the tyrant governments can't easily read it. They even are providing 
an open-source reference model, *and* asking for advice on implementation 
strategies.


There is no down side for us here. The only upside for them is not 
exclusively for them: Anyone who implements a protocol like this 
would gain the same benefit. For that matter, there is no way for 
them to gain from this over anyone else in the only ways which they 
do dominate: search and advertising, or even online apps. If they 
were closing this protocol then maybe they could gain over others, 
but they are opening it so it is only gain for all.
I read the same OSNews coments that you did, and these people need 
to learn to read the article before commenting.
Pekr
12-Nov-2009
[4394]
yes, you can see it in reactions. I have much deeper respect to proprietary 
guys like IBM or MS lately. Their technologies give me total picture 
of what I can use in our company. Well designed stuff. Those things 
might be complex, but well engineered (WebSphere). I will always 
be one refusing the servility. I have the same problem with Apple 
(Jobs). There is no problem with their products, but the problem 
is with the attitude and it starts to show. Even if Jobs introduces 
new icon on the desktop, he would get fanatical following. I can 
see the same wave of google fanatics emerging. The so called "google 
culture" is ... hyped.
BrianH
12-Nov-2009
[4395]
They can't even patent this protocol since they have already released 
the description of how this works *and* reference code.
Pekr
12-Nov-2009
[4396]
In comparison to MS or IBM I can see no top designers in google, 
having actually a vision, a complete one. They throw things here 
or there, they can do whatever (almost unlimited resources), and 
you can bet, that they lead us to lock-in ....
BrianH
12-Nov-2009
[4397]
I don't give a crap about Google culture. If the protocol is good 
(and it looks good so far) I'll write the R3 support for it.
Pekr
12-Nov-2009
[4398]
The lock in is in mentality. All the cloud crap, not having the date 
at my location everything on server. Welcome matrix :-)
BrianH
12-Nov-2009
[4399x2]
An open protocol doesn't have to be used with Google servers.
This is not cloud crap. It has nothing to do with lock-in. THis is 
a much lower-level protocol than that.
Pekr
12-Nov-2009
[4401]
You talk about the protocol all the time, I talk about generally 
Google submitting another thing and world swallowing anything they 
drop onto us. The protocol might be actually good. I just hate things 
being accepted just because they are provided by the "beloved one".
BrianH
12-Nov-2009
[4402x4]
The protocol is the Tech News. All the rest of the complaints about 
Google are not related to this Tech News.
And it is too soon to see if the protocol would be accepted just 
because it came from Google, or because it is good on its own merits, 
or *at all*, because it hasn't been accepted at all yet, just proposed. 
And since it was proposed I will look at it. If it sucks, I won't 
give it a second thought. Who gives a crap that it came from Google?
That AJAX that people like so much now: It came from Microsoft at 
first, and that doesn't make it greater. So did SOAP, and that doesn't 
make it suck less. Where it came from doesn't matter, all that matters 
is whether it benefits you and you are allowed to use it. In this 
case, I don't yet know whether it would benefit us (though it looks 
promising) but it does look like we would be allowed to use it (they 
probably can't patent it if they release it this way). If it is good, 
it would help REBOL/
...Services. No Google needed.
Ashley
13-Nov-2009
[4406]
I'll take SPDY and compiled JS over the alternative any day. Others 
are free to stick with HTTP, slow JS and 9600 baud modems if they 
so choose ...
Henrik
13-Nov-2009
[4407]
Well, who are the largest contributors to RFC? Without companies 
researching these things rather than universities, then we won't 
move forward.
Gabriele
13-Nov-2009
[4408]
a stateful http...
Pekr
20-Nov-2009
[4409x2]
Microsoft to open-up compilers - http://www.infoworld.com/d/developer-world/microsoft-open-compilers-visual-basic-c-894
Google unveils ChromeOS -

http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/11/releasing-chromium-os-open-source.html
http://www.osnews.com/story/22505/Google_Unveils_Chrome_OS
Henrik
20-Nov-2009
[4411]
hmm... so REBOL isn't going to be terribly interesting in ChromeOS 
unless it can get into the browser.
Graham
20-Nov-2009
[4412]
They'll have to jazz up the rebol home page then :)
Henrik
20-Nov-2009
[4413]
I guess we'll just have to build a REBOL/OS now.
Graham
20-Nov-2009
[4414]
What's wrong with running everything inside a rebol plugin ?
Henrik
20-Nov-2009
[4415]
well, that's just too limited for us rebolers :-)
Graham
20-Nov-2009
[4416]
let's see .. there's one Carl .. and an unfjinished r3 .. and you 
want to restart wildman?  :)
Henrik
20-Nov-2009
[4417]
I guess it should be wildman
Graham
20-Nov-2009
[4418]
Maybe that other Karl ( Robillard ) can switch his efforts from Boron 
to wildman instead :)
Henrik
20-Nov-2009
[4419]
I think the development of Boron is a bit of a shame. The effort 
should be directed towards R3 instead.
Pekr
20-Nov-2009
[4420]
exactly. I can understand open-source freaks. But open-sourcing something 
is not a mantra. Look at AROS, look at Orca - how is that it has 
not more users, than official distros?
Graham
20-Nov-2009
[4421]
the old saying .. united we conquer, divided we fall
Pekr
20-Nov-2009
[4422x3]
R2, architecture wise, in comparison to R3, is so old school, that 
it is not even funny to compare. Now having Orca/Boron following 
R2 model would be a mistake too. I think that if Karl wants Boron 
to succeed, then why not to use R3 host, and just re-create the interpreter 
(a DLL)? Of course we know nothing about the licence of R3 yet, maybe 
such a step will be prohibited?
Graham - exactly - I think that we have many things to do - port 
R3 to many platforms, create browser plugin, etc.  There is where 
our energy should be put. R3 is free. How more cheap you want it 
to have?
Of course we can't prevent ppl from anything. Boron might be good 
test-base for the interpreter itself ...
Henrik
20-Nov-2009
[4425]
is the license GPL? In that case that would explain some things.
Graham
20-Nov-2009
[4426x6]
The thing is, the mafia and other internet criminals are dictating 
how we use our PCs.
Viruses, malware, phishing etc are all forcing us to a self healing 
OS like Chrome where everything lives on the cloud.
I can see this as being very attractive to users tired of being threatened 
by every piece of malware out there.
So, how is rebol going to fit in this?
If the OS is going to handle the security side .. does this mean 
that the browser plugin can afford to worry less about security ??
Wasn't that the issue with the firefox plugin .. that the security 
model was never completed ...
Pekr
20-Nov-2009
[4432x2]
Graham - Google & co are teh mafia :-) There is no cloud, and there 
is no Chromium OS - they are just fooling us with marketing ;-) The 
cloud is - internet, and storing my data not on my device. Once there 
will be a time, when whole that cloud crap collapses, and you will 
want your local storage once again :-) And Chromium OS? What is that? 
Linux and Chrome browser on top of that ...
In regards to what I said - is there really a difference to security 
model? Because cloud just means - my hardisk is not in my machine, 
but somewhere else. But still there is an OS, apps, and still there 
is a user trying to click on everything you put in front of his eyes 
:-)
Graham
20-Nov-2009
[4434x2]
Every application will be sandboxed.
if the filing system is encrypted .. do you have to encrypt your 
files again?
Pekr
20-Nov-2009
[4436]
I have a Dell ntb with Bitlocker capable chip - so I run encrypted 
storage on my Vista for 2.5 years already ... nothing new here ...
Graham
20-Nov-2009
[4437x2]
that wasn't the point .. it was an allegory
but  .. using your ntb, do you encrypt sensitive files again?
TomBon
20-Nov-2009
[4439]
there is a difference pekr. in the cloud only one type of malware 
is nessesary to make a total collapse possible. ;-)

transfer responsibility  to a third party doesn't solve the problem. 

technological mono culture has the same advantages and disadventages 
like the biological one.