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Re: XML timeline
- From: Kurt Cagle <kurt.cagle@gmail.com>
- To: Rick Jelliffe <rjelliffe@allette.com.au>
- Date: Tue, 23 Jul 2019 20:03:14 -0700

Hi, Rick!
I thought you'd figured it out - the average life expectancy of a programmer before they get booted upstairs to management (or out to consulting) is about a decade. Most programmers also tend, once out of college, to educate themselves primarily by taking whatever they studied as the latest thing in college and what happens to be most available in the tech press and or Internet copy and paste of the time, and work with that as their default toolset. I learned XML in its infancy and developed a pretty solid understanding of it just about the time that Doug Crockford came along with JSON, and even argued with Doug a few times over the years about why JSON was such a bad idea. I still think it is, even as I spend most of my time working with it and cursing the limitations that it brings, even as my XQuery gets rusty. Of course, now I'm in RDF land, and there are times when I wonder when it all got so bloody complicated. Kurt Cagle Founder, Semantical LLC
First half of 1980s - it all is too complex.
Second half of 1980s - let's simplify things with SGML First half of 1990s - it is all too complex Second half of the 1990s - let's simplify things with HTML or XML First half of the 2000s - it is all too complex (a.k.a. XSD) Second half of the 2000s - let's simplify things (JSON or Markdown) First half of the 2010s - it's all too complex Second half of the 2010s - let's simplify things using code (GraphQL)
So in the second half of the 2010s: what technologies I been working with in the 5 years? CSV (still), SGML (still!), XML (still!), JSON (too soon to say "still?)
Shocking prediction: first half of the 2020s will be "Its all too complex".
Perhaps we need to embrace and celebrate this infinite spiral of making new babies and then throwing them out with the bathwater. Show quoted text ![Error Icon]() Address not found | Your message wasn't delivered to xml-dev@l... because the domain lists.xml-dev.org couldn't be found. Check for typos or unnecessary spaces and try again. |
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---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Rick Jelliffe < rjelliffe@a...> To: xml-dev@l...Cc: Bcc: Date: Tue, 23 Jul 2019 20:56:28 +1000 Subject: Re: XML timeline First half of 1980s - it all is too complex. Second half of 1980s - let's simplify things with SGML First half of 1990s - it is all too complex Second half of the 1990s - let's simplify things with HTML or XML First half of the 2000s - it is all too complex (a.k.a. XSD) Second half of the 2000s - let's simplify things (JSON or Markdown) First half of the 2010s - it's all too complex Second half of the 2010s - let's simplify things using code (GraphQL)
So in the second half of the 2010s: what technologies I been working with in the 5 years? CSV (still), SGML (still!), XML (still!), JSON (too soon to say "still?)
Shocking prediction: first half of the 2020s will be "Its all too complex".
Perhaps we need to embrace and celebrate this infinite spiral of making new babies and then throwing them out with the bathwater.
Rick
Does anyone know where there is a timeline openly published that depicts the development of all of the XML ecosystem components?
Search doesn't help much since I am looking for basically a history of the XML history.
Thanks,
-- <div dir="ltr" class=" ----- Message truncated -----
Does anyone know where there is a timeline openly published that depicts the development of all of the XML ecosystem components?
Search doesn't help much since I am looking for basically a history of the XML history.
Thanks,
--

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