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- From: Len Bullard <cbullard@hiwaay.net>
- To: Matthew Gertner <matthew@praxis.cz>
- Date: Tue, 02 Nov 1999 18:27:20 -0600
Matthew Gertner wrote:
> Really interesting stuff. When I first sat down and wrote the
> introduction it was about 10 times longer and contained some of this
> information, but it didn't seem especially relevant in the context of
> pleaing for schemas, so I pared it down to the point where it is mostly
> just a bunch of plausible-sounding lies.
It's a Jones of mine. Plausible lies, the speed with
which the World Wide Web distributes them and the
tendancy of the press and the similarly ignoble
readers of these lists to believe that nothing without
a URL is worth checking, make the WWW do precisely what
it was not designed to do: devolve knowledge. In
about a hundred years, they will burn the W3C founders
in effigy on the lawns at was once the hallowed
halls of MIT, but will then be a museum for the
slow and largely irrelevant who can't master
surfing in virtual hypercube. They won't burn
them for malice; they will do it for pleasure
because burning their heritage has been equated
with good memory management.
While it is a lot like a monkey putting the
plug back into the elephant, I am learning to
accept being tied to the elephant's tail. I will
never learn to like it.
Hmm... this humor thing might be worth learning... nah.
> Ouch. Whatever happened to poetic license? I thought "a hobbled subset
> of SGML" sounded snappier than "an SGML application specifying a
> vocabulary for the transfer and display of hypertext documents". The
> latter would also have detracted from the humorous value of the
> paragraph, of which there is hopefully at least some.
See above. The problem is, they quote you and when
they do that often enough, the universe gets a little
colder.
> > Tell 'em, "ahh, XML Works. We just don't agree on how."
>
> Seems like a healthy state of affairs. If we keep churning the idea
> bucket the One True Way will eventually become obvious.
No one true way; just a bag of tools and maps with lots
of roads to the same place. Look at DTDs as
view dimensions and aggregate them using OLAP tools.
Then decide where you want to go. That's one approach.
A DTD is the backside of a stored query. :-)
len
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