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"Team Ada: Ada Advocacy Issues (83 & 95)" <[log in to unmask]>
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Nick Roberts <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sun, 18 Mar 2001 17:14:13 -0800
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"Robert C. Leif, Ph.D." <[log in to unmask]>
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"Robert C. Leif, Ph.D." <[log in to unmask]>
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From: Bob Leif
To: Nick Roberts et al.
Please, no Smalltalk! 1) Ada syntax can provide a one to one correspondence
with the usual content of pull-down menus. Alsys' AdaWorld demonstrated the
Ada syntax was sufficient for a macro language. The only other acceptable
syntax is XML, since it is a good basis for the next generation of GUIs.

Concerning the GPL, I think that there is a very simple compromise that
would keep us entrepreneurs content. Offer the option of a reasonable
royalty paying license as an addition. If your user desires GPL and wishes
to follow GPL, fine. If another user wants a more conventional license,
include that opportunity. However, both options should be standardized and
provided prior to a developer incorporating the software.

-----Original Message-----
From: Team Ada: Ada Advocacy Issues (83 & 95)
[mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of Nick Roberts
Sent: Sunday, March 18, 2001 3:29 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Sucky software; GPL; QDI


----------
Sucky Software

I've followed this thread with interest. Several posters have put the case
for a balance being needed between the quality and cost of a piece of
software. I'd like, very briefly, to note here that my own antipathy towards
'sucky' software is based mainly on ethical considerations rather than
economic ones.

It is my assertion that the number of categories of software in use in our
society which are critical (to people's health, lives, livelihoods, and
well-being) is steadily increasing. To such obvious categories as aircraft
flight control software and computerised medical devices could be added
Internet service software (keeping people's credit card numbers secure, for
example), multi-media decoding software (upon which many entertaineers'
careers can become dependent), operating systems (upon which other critical
software ends up becoming dependent), and a plethora of others.

To my mind, it is should not be acceptable that economic forces alone
determine the quality of this critical software, in the same way that such
forces should not solely control, for example, aircraft safety or medical
practice.

One might claim that the forces of litigation form a good, and perhaps
sufficient, economic balance. I'm not arguing for or against this, but if
it's to be the model for our society (and I'm lumping the US and UK together
here :-o ;-) I'd like to see software consumers become more litigious.

----------
GPL

Some strong views have been expressed here about the GPL, as ever. I'd like
to throw in some of my thoughts.

I believe the real legal effect of the GPL is a somewhat nebulous thing,
since (to my knowledge) it has never been tested in any court, yet. This is
my own greatest concern about the GPL.

Describing the GPL as "a wrecker of intellectual property", whilst
essentially true, could be countered (at the opposite extreme) by an
accusation against intellectual property (its concept and enforcement) as
being a wrecker of social responsibility and/or scientific ethics. To use
more emotive language, one might accuse it of being a "mandate for greed".
Now, I wish to emphasise, that my own viewpoint falls somewhere between
these two extremes: I am in favour of an enforced system of intellectual
property, but I feel that the current typical regime (e.g. in the US and in
the UK) needs to be 'reigned back' somewhat (e.g. being stricter in the
granting of patents, and granting 'short' patents for certain processes); I
prefer a pragmatic attitude to intellectual property, as opposed to
'religious' arguments.

As for publicly funded software being released under the GPL, I agree with
others who have posted on the subject that it would be right to do so in
some cases, and not in others. In a case where it would be necessary for the
project to be under the GPL in order to attract the kind of contributors it
needed to succeed, then clearly it would be silly not to do so. On the other
hand, in a case where the value of the project to society would be (likely
to be) substantially diminished by releasing it under the GPL, it would
clearly be folly to do so. Surely what is needed is good decision-making on
a case-by-case basis, not a fixed policy one way or the other?

----------
Quick & Dirty Interfaces

J. F. Harrison made a point close to my heart, as the AdaOS project will
inevitably need a 'QDI' capability.

Ada can sometimes be an excellent prototyping and 'quickie' language, but
there are certain basic characteristics of Ada that often make it unsuitable
for QDIs:

(1) Ada is not really 'reflective', a property valuable to a RAD
environment, in that it that it makes it easier to manipulate and extend the
environment according to the developer's taste and special requirements;

(2) the Ada language is very verbose, which is as inappropriate for
'quickie' programs as it is advantageous for longer-lived ones;

(3) Ada is not interactive, and an interactive morphology (e.g. ACE) tends
to end up being substantially different to the compiled language whilst
retaining much of the the unwanted verbosity.

I am favouring a 'tiny' form of Smalltalk, at the moment, to fulfil a
QDI/RAD/VDE/shell/macro-language role in AdaOS. Remember, AdaOS will be
based heavily on CORBA, and the OMG-defined Smalltalk CORBA interface is
pretty neat. Comments welcome.

--
Nick Roberts
http://www.AdaOS.org

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