Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-22 Thread Arvid Picciani

On 12/21/2009 01:31 PM, Frédéric Perrin wrote:

Le lundi 21 à 18:57, Laurie Clark-Michalek a écrit :

And on the anal sex point... actually, I think it'd be better for the
convocation as a whole if we dropped that analogy.

 
 Is that what they call a
 Freudian slip?




I laughed.

--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies


Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-21 Thread Emmanuel Gras
2009/12/20 Laurie Clark-Michalek bluepepp...@archlinux.us

  You cannot write an
  application for windows and expect it to work on Linux.

 Java? The success of the language is based around the fact that almost
 every computer has the runtime installed, regardless of operating
 system. Does that not count as a global API?

 Laurie


I can't resist to quote awarenetwork (http://www.awarenetwork.org/usr/?q=11
):

saying java is good because it runs on all platforms is like saying anal
sex is great because it works on all genders

:-)

Manu


Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-21 Thread Angel Velásquez
On Sun, Dec 20, 2009 at 7:52 AM, Laurie Clark-Michalek
bluepepp...@archlinux.us wrote:
 You cannot write an
 application for windows and expect it to work on Linux.

 Java? The success of the language is based around the fact that almost
 every computer has the runtime installed, regardless of operating
 system. Does that not count as a global API?

 Laurie


Say whaaat? Java? Girl, don't take it bad, but .. NO, or you want a
bloated and crappy OS?.

-- 
Angel Velásquez
angvp @ irc.freenode.net
Arch Linux Trusted User
Linux Counter: #359909
http://www.angvp.com


Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-21 Thread Ryan Sims
On Fri, Dec 18, 2009 at 4:24 AM, RedShift redsh...@pandora.be wrote:
 Hi all


 It dawned on my that lots of industries have standards and companies
 generally keep to them. For example slabs of aluminium have standard sizes,
 building materials have well defined specifications, or take electrical
 components: there's a huge list of standardized components. You can expect
 between 220 and 240 VAC from your wall socket, fuses have standard formats
 and ratings, 1 meter here is exactly the same as 1 meter in another country,
 etc... Even CD's, which have been around for decades by now, have always
 been created using the same format (albeit extended somewhat, over time, but
 a normal CD pressed now should still play in a CD player that's 20 years
 old).

 It allows for a very competitive market where choices are made based on
 price, quality, availability, etc...

I look at it this way: an OS is a *tool,* whereas electricity, CDs and
such are commodities, and need to be fungible. Tools are *not*
fungible; the way you interface with a tool is very tightly coupled
with the purpose of that tool, which is why you should never use a
hammer to pull a screw. The abstractions OSs (and also programming
languages) present represent what they're designed to do, so making a
one-size-fits-all tool is worse than useless. The desktop wars and
such arguments all commit the fallacy that OSs are a pretty shell over
computer hardware, whereas they are (or should be) tools targeted at
(more or less) specific solutions.

-- 
Ryan W Sims


Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-21 Thread Laurie Clark-Michalek
2009/12/21 Angel Velásquez an...@archlinux.com.ve:
 On Sun, Dec 20, 2009 at 7:52 AM, Laurie Clark-Michalek
 bluepepp...@archlinux.us wrote:
 You cannot write an
 application for windows and expect it to work on Linux.

 Java? The success of the language is based around the fact that almost
 every computer has the runtime installed, regardless of operating
 system. Does that not count as a global API?

 Laurie


 Say whaaat? Java? Girl, don't take it bad, but .. NO, or you want a
 bloated and crappy OS?.

 --
 Angel Velásquez
 angvp @ irc.freenode.net
 Arch Linux Trusted User
 Linux Counter: #359909
 http://www.angvp.com


Hey now, lets chill it a bit, I never said it was good... just universal.

And on the anal sex point... actually, I think it'd be better for the
convocation as a whole if we dropped that analogy.

Laurie


Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-21 Thread Chris Brannon
Laurie Clark-Michalek bluepepp...@archlinux.us writes:

 Java? The success of the language is based around the fact that almost
 every computer has the runtime installed, regardless of operating
 system. Does that not count as a global API?

The concept is called write once, run anywhere.  An early example is
UCSD Pascal, developed in the late 1970s.  UCSD Pascal's P-code is
somewhat analogous to JVM bytecode.  There were implementations of the
P-code interpreter for many early microcomputers.  Perhaps UCSD Pascal
would have been more popular if it weren't so expensive.  IIRC, the IBM PC
version was priced at $495.  MS-DOS was cheaper.
Java may be the most popular example of write once, read anywhere, but
it was not the first.

-- Chris



Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-21 Thread Frédéric Perrin
Le lundi 21 à 18:57, Laurie Clark-Michalek a écrit :
 And on the anal sex point... actually, I think it'd be better for the
 convocation as a whole if we dropped that analogy.

Is that what they call a
Freudian slip?

-- 
Fred


Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-21 Thread Laurie Clark-Michalek
2009/12/21 Frédéric Perrin frederic.per...@resel.fr:
 Le lundi 21 à 18:57, Laurie Clark-Michalek a écrit :
 And on the anal sex point... actually, I think it'd be better for the
 convocation as a whole if we dropped that analogy.
                                            
                                            Is that what they call a
                                            Freudian slip?

 --
 Fred


I never should have said anything *facepalm*

Laurie


Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-20 Thread Pierre Chapuis
Le Sat, 19 Dec 2009 23:10:29 +0100,
Frédéric Perrin frederic.per...@resel.fr a écrit :

 Le vendredi 18 à 10:24, RedShift a écrit :
  Things like enumerating all hardware
  devices, configuring a network interface, drawing a window, ejecting
  the CD-ROM drive, getting notified about new hardware plugged in,
  etc... It's different on every operating system. 
 
 Isn't it one of the goals of hal ? It does exist outside of Linux (in
 FreeBSD for instance: http://www.freebsd.org/gnome/docs/halfaq.html).

The problem is that it's deprecated. But you have a point that the
FreeDesktop initiative tries to fulfill part of those wishes.

-- 
catwell


Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-20 Thread Laurie Clark-Michalek
 You cannot write an
 application for windows and expect it to work on Linux.

Java? The success of the language is based around the fact that almost
every computer has the runtime installed, regardless of operating
system. Does that not count as a global API?

Laurie


Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-19 Thread Frédéric Perrin
Le vendredi 18 à 10:24, RedShift a écrit :
 Things like enumerating all hardware
 devices, configuring a network interface, drawing a window, ejecting
 the CD-ROM drive, getting notified about new hardware plugged in,
 etc... It's different on every operating system. 

Isn't it one of the goals of hal ? It does exist outside of Linux (in
FreeBSD for instance: http://www.freebsd.org/gnome/docs/halfaq.html).

  You cannot write a
 driver for Linux and expect it to work on FreeBSD. You cannot write an
 application for windows and expect it to work on Linux. When you buy a
 piece of hardware you usually hope for the best that it'll work
 out-of-the-box including all extra features.

If OS internals are to be so similar that they expose the same API to
hardware drivers, where is there room for differentiation between two
OSes? FreeBSD, to continue with the unkwown giant, prides itself with
writing a very well designed OS, whereas Linux (kernel  userland) does
not have the same quality standards. As a result, things evolve less
quickly in FreeBSD, but are usually more stable. I'm talking about the
architecture of the code; when was the last time a major subsystem of
FreeBSD was rewritten? (I mean, except the USB stack in 8).

-- 
Fred


[arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-18 Thread RedShift

Hi all


It dawned on my that lots of industries have standards and companies generally 
keep to them. For example slabs of aluminium have standard sizes, building 
materials have well defined specifications, or take electrical components: 
there's a huge list of standardized components. You can expect between 220 and 
240 VAC from your wall socket, fuses have standard formats and ratings, 1 meter 
here is exactly the same as 1 meter in another country, etc... Even CD's, which 
have been around for decades by now, have always been created using the same 
format (albeit extended somewhat, over time, but a normal CD pressed now should 
still play in a CD player that's 20 years old).

It allows for a very competitive market where choices are made based on price, 
quality, availability, etc...

Why doesn't the computer business have something similar? Sure processors are interchangeable in a 
limited way, we use standardized RAM, standard interfaces for accessing our peripherals, etc... But 
not when it comes to software. Why don't we have one universal API that works on every operating 
system? Yes there is libc, the language C is defined in some way, but I'm talking about 
stuff that would make applications 100% portable. Things like enumerating all hardware devices, 
configuring a network interface, drawing a window, ejecting the CD-ROM drive, getting notified 
about new hardware plugged in, etc... It's different on every operating system. You cannot write a 
driver for Linux and expect it to work on FreeBSD. You cannot write an application for windows and 
expect it to work on Linux. When you buy a piece of hardware you usually hope for the best that 
it'll work out-of-the-box including all extra features.

So why is that? Why hasn't someone stepped up and even try and create a universal 
operating system API? Is it because the computer business is still a child in 
some way, compared to other industries?


Just a thought.


Glenn


Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-18 Thread Damien Churchill
2009/12/18 RedShift redsh...@pandora.be:
 Hi all


 It dawned on my that lots of industries have standards and companies
 generally keep to them. For example slabs of aluminium have standard sizes,
 building materials have well defined specifications, or take electrical
 components: there's a huge list of standardized components. You can expect
 between 220 and 240 VAC from your wall socket, fuses have standard formats
 and ratings, 1 meter here is exactly the same as 1 meter in another country,
 etc... Even CD's, which have been around for decades by now, have always
 been created using the same format (albeit extended somewhat, over time, but
 a normal CD pressed now should still play in a CD player that's 20 years
 old).

 It allows for a very competitive market where choices are made based on
 price, quality, availability, etc...

 Why doesn't the computer business have something similar? Sure processors
 are interchangeable in a limited way, we use standardized RAM, standard
 interfaces for accessing our peripherals, etc... But not when it comes to
 software. Why don't we have one universal API that works on every operating
 system? Yes there is libc, the language C is defined in some way, but I'm
 talking about stuff that would make applications 100% portable. Things like
 enumerating all hardware devices, configuring a network interface, drawing a
 window, ejecting the CD-ROM drive, getting notified about new hardware
 plugged in, etc... It's different on every operating system. You cannot
 write a driver for Linux and expect it to work on FreeBSD. You cannot write
 an application for windows and expect it to work on Linux. When you buy a
 piece of hardware you usually hope for the best that it'll work
 out-of-the-box including all extra features.

 So why is that? Why hasn't someone stepped up and even try and create a
 universal operating system API? Is it because the computer business is still
 a child in some way, compared to other industries?


 Just a thought.


 Glenn


Isn't this what POSIX was, albeit quite old now, but still a standard?


Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-18 Thread Fabian Schölzel
 For example slabs of aluminium have standard sizes

I would guess there are at least 50 different standards available for
alu plates. But the difference to the computer world is, you can take
any of that plates, drill a hole and mount stuff.

 building materials have well defined specifications

With an emphasis on specification_s_. Sometimes it's troublesome to
keep up with the changes (or complete overhauls).

 So why is that? Why hasn't someone stepped up and even try and create a
 universal operating system API? Is it because the computer business is still
 a child in some way, compared to other industries?

Computers are still in it's childhood, i would say, too. I would say,
if you create such unified API now, you would delimit the functionalty
to the intersection of all hardware that is now availbale. If
everybody would develop on this base, it would lead to restricted (and
slow) software. (I'm no programmer, so i mighty be wrong here.)

But i think we already have a big abstraction level in software
nowadays. Think of Java or Python. Nobody has to write everything in
assembler. I think things have to iron out themselves in the computer
bussines. I read today about the computer simulation of the
construction of the roof from the munich Olypmic stadium. The result
of that calculations is on 600.000 punched cards. That was only 25
years ago. Now think of what long way metallurgy has gone in our
history.

So i think it is too early for hat. Most people even don't know, what
they want from computers.

Cheers,
Fabian


Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-18 Thread sherryhowell50
I think it's because computers develop too quickly to have it.  Some of
the other things you mention such as building materials have been around
for years, even centuries, and are the way they are going to be.  I
think if someone developed a bright new way of creating aluminum ingots
for instance, that the aluminum industry would be thrown into chaos
because some of the old way of doing it wouldn't fit, just in the way
the computer industry is now.  When the computer industry settles down
and quits  developing so quickly then it will have a certain accepted
way of doing things too.  Of course then it won't be nearly as
interesting, and I for one, if I'm still around by that point, will have
to find something else to tinker with.



Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-18 Thread Pierre Chapuis
There are things like that (think NDIS - it's Microsoft, but it's a
step in the right direction), just not enough , but I think it's a
question of time.

-- 
catwell


Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-18 Thread Arvid Picciani

On 12/18/2009 01:26 AM, Damien Churchill wrote:


Isn't this what POSIX was, albeit quite old now, but still a standard?


imagine that: some people out there still think posix is THE standard 
and people should read the spec BEFORE reimplementing basics in the name 
of making things cross platform.


even windows gains more posix implementation every version. The only 
ones actually going slowly AWAY from the standard are the GNUs.


--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies


Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-18 Thread Aaron Griffin
On Fri, Dec 18, 2009 at 3:26 AM, Damien Churchill dam...@gmail.com wrote:
 Isn't this what POSIX was, albeit quite old now, but still a standard?

POSIX and the SUSv3 (Single Unix Specification)


Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-18 Thread Chris Brannon
Pierre Chapuis catw...@archlinux.us writes:

 There are things like that (think NDIS - it's Microsoft, but it's a
 step in the right direction), just not enough , but I think it's a
 question of time.

And then there's the UDI (universal driver interface) (UDI), which Stallman
doesn't like.  I can certainly see arguments for both sides of that
issue.

As an aside, I interviewed for a job with MS last year.  At some point,
the device driver issue was discussed.  One of my interviewers made the
comment that a universal driver interface would be a bad thing, because
it reduces competition.  I don't think that they like commoditized
things at all.

-- Chris



Re: [arch-general] A universal Operating System API - why don't we have it?

2009-12-18 Thread Xavier
On Fri, Dec 18, 2009 at 5:31 PM, Chris Brannon cmbranno...@gmail.com wrote:
 Pierre Chapuis catw...@archlinux.us writes:

 There are things like that (think NDIS - it's Microsoft, but it's a
 step in the right direction), just not enough , but I think it's a
 question of time.

 And then there's the UDI (universal driver interface) (UDI), which Stallman
 doesn't like.  I can certainly see arguments for both sides of that
 issue.

 As an aside, I interviewed for a job with MS last year.  At some point,
 the device driver issue was discussed.  One of my interviewers made the
 comment that a universal driver interface would be a bad thing, because
 it reduces competition.  I don't think that they like commoditized
 things at all.


Was that a private joke or something ? :)
The only thing MS has ever done or tried to do is killing competition.
And who writes drivers ? Isn't it / shouldn't it be the hardware
makers who designed the hardware in the first place ?
And most of them probably invest 99% of the resources for Windows, and
1% for all the other os.

Well it probably depends a lot on the hardware/drivers we talk about,
so it is probably difficult to stay general. And to be honest, I
probably don't have a good picture of it. But it just sounds like a
funny argument to me.