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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] RE: The relentless march of abstraction (fwd)
Probably because we still have some practicing to do designing coarse transactions. It isn't easy or straightforward to take previously short fast transactions and glomming them to pass the ACID test. We should discuss that more. Are any best practices emerging yet? Do we need conceptual design tools for that? Also, there aren't enough clients capable of in a shared and reliable way doing the right thing with aggregate docs and federated pages. A lot of folks are still designing to BasicHTML paradigms for statelessness. Really, I don't think the SunGURU position of fat server/thin client or the MicrosoftGURU position of fat client/fat server works for all cases. A message switch is the crux. Len http://www.mp3.com/LenBullard Ekam sat.h, Vipraah bahudhaa vadanti. Daamyata. Datta. Dayadhvam.h -----Original Message----- From: Tim Bray [mailto:tbray@t...] At 11:41 AM 27/02/01 -0500, David Megginson wrote: >I think that client-side XML failed simply because it didn't fill a >big enough real need (HTML 4 is close enough) I have a problem with your verb tense. The web is still too slow. Fatter pipes aren't going to help. The only way to make it fast is to do some of the work on the (severely underemployed, these days) client, and the only way to do that is to send some useful data there to get chewed on. So I think client-side XML just hasn't got going yet. To say it had failed, it would be necessary for it to have been tried. -Tim
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