User talk:Colby Russell/Draft:The case for accepting the W3C–WHATWG hypertext system as the universal medium, aka "Browsers, builds, and burdens": Difference between revisions

Discussion page of User:Colby Russell/Draft:The case for accepting the W3C–WHATWG hypertext system as the universal medium, aka "Browsers, builds, and burdens"
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(Seymour and Python as an anti-example)
(Fielding and a third-party piece on what browsers can do)
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* Use the Moonchild editor <https://harc.github.io/moonchild/> to make the case for 2
* Use the Moonchild editor <https://harc.github.io/moonchild/> to make the case for 2
** Use the Seymour paper ("we plan to adapt Seymour to use Python") as an example of how not to approach this <https://harc.github.io/seymour-live2017/>
** Use the Seymour paper ("we plan to adapt Seymour to use Python") as an example of how not to approach this <https://harc.github.io/seymour-live2017/>
* Consider Fielding's remark about "software design on the scale of decades: every detail is intended to promote software longevity and independent evolution. Many of the constraints are directly opposed to short-term efficiency. Unfortunately, people are fairly good at short-term design, and usually awful at long-term design. Most don’t think they need to design past the current release." <https://roy.gbiv.com/untangled/2008/rest-apis-must-be-hypertext-driven>
* "Almost as if" browsers were designed for sharing and interacting with hypermedia <https://floooh.github.io/2019/01/05/wasm-embedding.html>

Revision as of 15:46, 15 August 2020

1. Recognizing executable programs as a subset of hypermedia

2. Acknowledging the circumstances of our predicament (or: constraints are always a consideration in an engineering problem)

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