Ware Ware Wizardjin
Ed Gould
ed at mtxinu.COM
Tue Apr 9 12:05:25 AEST 1991
>X now has been elevated to the status of "Standard", and now that
>this has happened, there will be little work on such protocols
>outside of a few research labs for some time. Truthfully I don't
>know whether this is good or bad; it seems that machines like the
>Sparc II and DEC 5K have finally gotten enough moxie to run X well
>and their prices will be in the "easily affordable" range in a
>couple years or less.
It is true that X has largely become a de facto standard. What
that should mean, really, is that the X *protocol* has become
standard. It also happens to mean that the current X *implementation*
has become standard. That's where I have problems accepting X.
The current implementation is too large and too slow. There is no
good technical reason that a small, efficient X server couldn't be
written. The same is, to a somewhat lesser degree, true of the
client code and toolkits.
>Also, the standard means that finally there'll be the possibility
>of easy-to-use, graphical software for UNIX that has decent manuals,
>regular releases, 24-hour phone support, and enough sales volume
>to get the unit price under $1,000. Only when this happens will
>UNIX cease to be a "niche" OS.
I have no argument with easy to use, well documented software. I
have a problem with it only when it eats more of my system than I
believe it deserves. I don't even have a problem with features,
so long as they have a real purpose, and aren't just somebody's
ill-considered idea of a neat hack that "will just take a few lines
of code." 3-D pushbuttons on a GUI just aren't worth the cycles.
--
Ed Gould No longer formally affiliated with,
ed at mtxinu.COM and certainly not speaking for, mt Xinu.
"I'll fight them as a woman, not a lady. I'll fight them as an engineer."
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