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  Wednesday, September 04, 2002 

Tom Yager's blog debuts

Back in my BYTE days, the editorial staff used to congregate on a text-mode conferencing system called BIX. Some incredibly sharp wits held forth there, none sharper than Tom Yager. Happily, he is now my colleague again here at InfoWorld, where he holds forth as a columnist and ace analyst/reviewer. It always bugged me that so little of our BIX chatter was able to surface to a wider audience. Well, times change, and I'm delighted to say that Tom recently started a weblog.

Between BYTE and InfoWorld, our paths intertwingled in an odd way. When I first knew Tom he was already a versatile (and astonishingly articulate) developer with boatloads of experience in all kinds of technical areas. Among other things, he became the architect and maven of BYTE's multimedia lab, and put himself way ahead of the curve on topics like desktop video. He was also, by his own admission, a Unix zealot, at a time when I was more comfortable with OS/2 and NT. A few years later, things reversed. Tom was earning a living cranking out IIS/ASP applications. I had just completed a major development project on a purely open source foundation -- Linux/Apache/mod_perl -- and was as zealous about this no-Microsoft solution as Tom had become about his all-MS stuff.

Nowadays, we both seem to have lost our religion and come to a pragmatic view of the costs, benefits, and uses of various technologies. I loved Tom's Losing my Religion column, and the phrase he coins in it -- technology attachment disorder (TAD). His first blog entry, a parable about HVAC (as in Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning, not HTML/VRML Automatic Compilation), further expands on one of the unfortunate consequences of TAD:

At the last Microsoft PDC, I walked by someone wearing a T-shirt that said, "Here's a pointer: real programmers use C++." My AC ordeal brought to mind the ridiculous, unjustified caste distinctions between blue and white collar workers, and the similarly baseless distinctions separating high tech workers. I think that shirt bothered me so much because I used to buy into that kind of snobbery. I don't remember what got me past that--it was something like my business with the AC. I do know that the fewer people I look down on, the more I like myself and my work. [Yager Radio]

Well said. And...welcome!

 

RSS olive branches

In the summer of 2000 I wrote a report that explored the uses of Internet-style groupware for scientific collaboration. In Section 3 I tried to show an audience of scientists how the two-way information flow of blogging and RSS newsfeed aggregation could support and accelerate the collaboration that is at the heart of the scientific enterprise.

Two years later, I'd make the same argument. And I'd probably have to. Despite massive uptake of blogging in certain circles, I don't see evidence that it has made much of a dent in scientific communities. The same is true, I think, in many other professions. Blogging seems huge to those of us engaged in it, and in important ways it is. Culturally, it represents a style of communication that is genuinely new. Technically, it may be the most popular application of XML. But blogging is still a drop in the ocean of email. It's far from ubiquitous, and at the ETech conference, both Sam Ruby and I were surprised to see how little-understood RSS feeds were even among experienced bloggers.

From a fifty-thousand-foot perspective, the squabble over RSS formats looks like a tempest in a teapot. Neither the simplicity of RSS .9x nor the extensibility of RSS 1.0 matters to someone who has yet to experience the "virtuous cycle" that is only recently being discovered by so many -- for example, Don Box:

While spending my evening with RSS, I had two epiphanies:

The connection between blogging and RSS is deep. WS-IL is the closest we have to RSS in the web service space.

With respect to the first observation, the cycle looks something like this:

while (true) {
ScanRSSFeeds();
RantAboutStuffYouSawFromRSSFeeds();
ExposeYourRantsViaRSS();
}

What an amazingly virtuous cycle!

I submit that we're still at the beginning of the RSS adoption curve. To insiders, it seems as though the squabble has gone on forever, but I don't think outsiders see that. Up to a point, we can put band-aids on the wound, but it does need to be healed -- and I don't think it's too late. It's encouraging to see Dave Winer's statement in favor of namespaces and modular extensibility in the RSS 0.94 roadmap. Will the RSS 1.0 camp offer an olive branch of its own? I hope so.

 


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