file attributes
Boyd Roberts
boyd at prl.dec.com
Tue Jun 25 20:15:23 AEST 1991
In article <1783 at sranha.sra.co.jp>, erik at srava.sra.co.jp (Erik M. van der Poel) writes:
> If the computer cannot handle a particular piece of data, the human
> should be able to find out what the data is, in order to take
> appropriate action (e.g. buy a copy of the application). That is why
> we need human-readable metadata.
`human readable'? So what language are you going to choose? Binary
data and text are no different. They are a terminology, a subset of
a language. So, are we going to use Esparanto to describe our data?
Just look at Esparanto. It's an object lesson in how _not_ to do things.
They said, `we need an international language'. They built one. Does anyone
use it? Does it server any useful purpose? Another solution looking
for a problem.
Exactly the path you want to take. There isn't even a problem, and you have a `solution', lashed together with supposition and ignorance.
> The magic number scheme was designed at a time when computer nerds
> were excessively worried about disk space and efficiency.
That's outrageous. You understand nothing.
> Disk prices
> are coming down, and shared libraries are becoming universal. We don't
> need to worry about disk space and efficiency that much. Let's give
> the ordinary humans some readable metadata. And let's give the
> programmers some metadata that is extremely easy to parse, and very
> extensible.
I see you work in Japan. The last sentence mentions `shared libraries' and
`efficiency'. So tell me you're not just a parody of `Ohta'?
Boyd Roberts boyd at prl.dec.com
``When the going gets wierd, the weird turn pro...''
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