A shared sentiment

Brad and I have been discussing web architecture, programming methodologies, and frameworks recently. REST is certainly our architectural style of choice, and the edge of the diving board for the necessary shift in thinking gets closer daily.

During our discussions over the last several weeks, we’ve learned a few great things:

  1. We want to build what’s next — not just buzz or hype, but what you want next or the next thing that would make your life easier.
  2. It will likely be semantic, addressable, and built on technology from the early 1990’s — when TBL envisioned the Web, his initial idea was to make it both readable (as it is now) and writable (as it’s slowly becoming). Our objective is to fulfill that with the products we build. In addition, the more meaning (semantics) and “future-proofing” we can throw into the mix, the better for all.
  3. Friendly, documented, simplicity should describe all we do — simplicity takes more education, intention, and forethought than complexity, but the payoff is unparalleled. Because education is needed, the more obvious and documented the functionality of a program, the more usable the program.

With those items in our heads, we’ve begun looking at the way we write, code, and manage our time and resources. Sometimes its painful to compare what you’d like to be doing with what you’ve done, but the value of the analysis is valuable beyond quantification.

What triggered this post was a quote I found today while looking for something else:

When people ask me what I do for a living, I say that I research what the web of the future could be. At that point, they ask me to give them an example of what that would mean for them. My usual reply is “if we are successful, the only difference you’ll perceive is that you won’t feel as constantly lost as you feel today”. At that point they smile, happy to meet a technologist who thinks it’s his fault, not theirs, if they can’t do something with his software.

No matter what technology or platform we build the future of the web upon, we need to learn how to write the software that delivers those smiles: anything short of that will be a failure.

from Piggy Bank, Cocoon and the Future of the Web

It’s a sentiment we share, and one we’re hard at work attempting to achieve. We’ll share more about how we’re getting closer to our goals as we work/fight our way to them.

One Response to “A shared sentiment”

  1. Craig Overend Says:

    I have the same problem… I’m researching what comes after what your researching. Try explaining that one to the average Joe! :)

    On a more realistic note, you may enjoy this video of terapods.

Leave a Reply

© 2007-2009 BigBlueHat
Close
E-mail It