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   Re: Why do we write standards?

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  • From: Len Bullard <cbullard@hiwaay.net>
  • To: "Simon St.Laurent" <simonstl@simonstl.com>
  • Date: Tue, 09 Nov 1999 17:56:31 -0600

Simon St.Laurent wrote:
> 
> We've got the core set.  Why not let users experiment with that basic set
> of tools before we try to slap them in straitjackets?  I hear people on
> this list insisting on the need for constraints, for fixed structures, for
> all that stuff that made sense when computers were (relatively) slow and
> stupid and data structures were hard to convert from one form to another.

Make schemas time-dynamic systems and enable the namespace to 
reflect that volatility and variant.  Shouldn't be that hard if 
you agree that registries are just records of authority and that 
a given ROA can be said to dominate discourse within the process 
space.

The reason I originally suggested using a time model from 
a music standard for enterprise management is that it contains 
an asynchronous model of gestures for synchronizing a performance.  
The most obvious problem of XML-centric, namespace authorities is 
the same as any other set of related standards:  discovering 
redundancy and differentiating it from overlapping dimensional 
members.

len



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