On Sun, Nov 17, 2013 at 6:00 PM, Stephen Cameron wrote:In 1991, Sowa first stated his Law of Standards:
Well, that's certainly one possible result: standards often do fail. But for many of these examples, the "result" was no result at all, because they were already de facto standards:Already standards, so not an example.This is a good example. Algol 68 was "extend Algol 60 in every possible way", whereas Pascal was "extend Algol 60 in only the absolutely necessary ways."
- The introduction of the Ada language resulting in C becoming the de facto standard for DoD programming
Ada displaced all the non-C programming languages actually in use, though. We don't hear much of Jovial any more, for example. FWIU, military embedded C programming came along quite a while later.
- The introduction of OS/2 resulting in Windows becoming the de facto standard for desktop OS
OS/2 was not any kind of standard, so irrelevant.
- The introduction of X.400 resulting in SMTP becoming the de facto standard for electronic mail
SMTP was already a de facto standard, so not an example.
- The introduction of X.500 resulting in LDAP becoming the de facto standard for directory services
LDAP *is* X.500, just on top of a different transport.--
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