Comment Re:Not so impressed (Score 5, Informative) 195
first, i'll apologize for running beepcore.org on a small server
combined with tomcat. (if someone has some hints on making
netbsd/apache/tomcat run more robustly in the face of significant load
-- or if you can tell me how to get the thing to fail gracefully instead
of tossing its stack -- please drop me a private email -
mrose+mtr.slashdot@dbc.mtview.ca.us - thanks!).
second, i have to praise this post for the way it seemlessly blends a
little bit of truth, a little bit of wisdom, along with a healthy amount
of ignorance and untruth. (my favorite untruth: marshall as the OSI
guy. the actual truth: marshall killed OSI in the IETF on November 4th,
1993 with the "roadkill in motion" speech.)
it is easy to agree with the fact that beep suffers from both political
and technical hurdles. as usual though, folks can disgree on the actual
details.
on the technical front: the beep specs use DTD not schema -- there
aren't any schema fragments in either rfc3080 or rfc3081, you must be
thinking of something else. the choice of DTD over schema is simple:
DTDs are ugly, but schema sucks. that explains why everyone has their
own pet language for defining the acceptable syntax of an XML
document. if schema was a winner, we'd be seeing fewer alternatives
instead of more.
everyone has their own "main complaint" about http. i hadn't heard the
verbose encoding one before, but maybe we should ask Keith Moore to add
it to the list (cf., rfc3205).
certainly, there's a lot we can agree on with respect to the political
front, so i'll just focus on the part we don't agree on.
the actual consumer for beep is the ietf. there used to be this joke
that the apps area invented cloning, because all working groups formed
argued exactly the same issues, over and over and over again, regardless
of the problem to be solved.
with beep, no one gets to argue those things any more (e.g., how to
frame packets), instead they get to go off and presumably argue things
specific to their application domain. (if folks want to understand the
reasoning behind this, check out rfc3117.)
the sacred working group, that you're so pissed off about me cutting
into, is a perfect example. a bunch of guys focused on security issues,
trying to write an application protocol. sorry, wrong skill set.
contrary to popular belief, i don't need to go looking for trouble. in
this case, it was a couple of ADs leaving an early sacred meeting,
shaking their heads, and then asking me to beat some sense into some
folks.
if you're unhappy that i stuck my nose in your business, then all
i can suggest is you get more clueful in the application design space,
so "the management" doesn't feel they have to go out and get you
help. particularly help that you don't like, and especially help that
would rather be doing other things with other people.
beep isn't research. it's a "best hits" collection of stuff dating back
to 1981 that's known to actually work. the only new part of beep is that
it got integrated into one coherent spec. and that's the reason that the
iesg approved it after only a year. they were familar with what it did,
how it worked, and they had a problem.
of course, you are perfectly free to attribute this to an "old boys
network" (i'm sure allison would appreciate that). when i find the
actual "right wing conspiracy", i'll be sure to sign up. it will
certainly reduce my frustration in dealing with the 100's of procedural
hurdles that get thrown in my way at the ietf.
finally, as far as web services go, well, let's just say that those guys
could learn a lot from what xerox did back in the early 80's. in a few
years, they may actually have something that works half as well as what
xerox did... /mtr
combined with tomcat. (if someone has some hints on making
netbsd/apache/tomcat run more robustly in the face of significant load
-- or if you can tell me how to get the thing to fail gracefully instead
of tossing its stack -- please drop me a private email -
mrose+mtr.slashdot@dbc.mtview.ca.us - thanks!).
second, i have to praise this post for the way it seemlessly blends a
little bit of truth, a little bit of wisdom, along with a healthy amount
of ignorance and untruth. (my favorite untruth: marshall as the OSI
guy. the actual truth: marshall killed OSI in the IETF on November 4th,
1993 with the "roadkill in motion" speech.)
it is easy to agree with the fact that beep suffers from both political
and technical hurdles. as usual though, folks can disgree on the actual
details.
on the technical front: the beep specs use DTD not schema -- there
aren't any schema fragments in either rfc3080 or rfc3081, you must be
thinking of something else. the choice of DTD over schema is simple:
DTDs are ugly, but schema sucks. that explains why everyone has their
own pet language for defining the acceptable syntax of an XML
document. if schema was a winner, we'd be seeing fewer alternatives
instead of more.
everyone has their own "main complaint" about http. i hadn't heard the
verbose encoding one before, but maybe we should ask Keith Moore to add
it to the list (cf., rfc3205).
certainly, there's a lot we can agree on with respect to the political
front, so i'll just focus on the part we don't agree on.
the actual consumer for beep is the ietf. there used to be this joke
that the apps area invented cloning, because all working groups formed
argued exactly the same issues, over and over and over again, regardless
of the problem to be solved.
with beep, no one gets to argue those things any more (e.g., how to
frame packets), instead they get to go off and presumably argue things
specific to their application domain. (if folks want to understand the
reasoning behind this, check out rfc3117.)
the sacred working group, that you're so pissed off about me cutting
into, is a perfect example. a bunch of guys focused on security issues,
trying to write an application protocol. sorry, wrong skill set.
contrary to popular belief, i don't need to go looking for trouble. in
this case, it was a couple of ADs leaving an early sacred meeting,
shaking their heads, and then asking me to beat some sense into some
folks.
if you're unhappy that i stuck my nose in your business, then all
i can suggest is you get more clueful in the application design space,
so "the management" doesn't feel they have to go out and get you
help. particularly help that you don't like, and especially help that
would rather be doing other things with other people.
beep isn't research. it's a "best hits" collection of stuff dating back
to 1981 that's known to actually work. the only new part of beep is that
it got integrated into one coherent spec. and that's the reason that the
iesg approved it after only a year. they were familar with what it did,
how it worked, and they had a problem.
of course, you are perfectly free to attribute this to an "old boys
network" (i'm sure allison would appreciate that). when i find the
actual "right wing conspiracy", i'll be sure to sign up. it will
certainly reduce my frustration in dealing with the 100's of procedural
hurdles that get thrown in my way at the ietf.
finally, as far as web services go, well, let's just say that those guys
could learn a lot from what xerox did back in the early 80's. in a few
years, they may actually have something that works half as well as what
xerox did...