Core work still going on 33 years later
Core work still going on 33 years later
Posted Oct 20, 2024 22:39 UTC (Sun) by Paf (subscriber, #91811)In reply to: Core work still going on 33 years later by willy
Parent article: The long road to lazy preemption
Frankly, this view is a little harsh, but Pike has always seemed to me bitter that he came along a little too late and too uninterested in the idea that a problem could be, well, fairly well solved by existing systems. I think Plan 9 wound up irrelevant not because industry is stupid or hidebound, but because it didn't represent enough of an improvement (where it was an improvement at all).
Some problems do, at a certain point, end up, for some sense of the word solved, mostly solved. And the kind of innovation that previously defined a system/product/whatever trails off and moves elsewhere.
At a certain point, we stopped changing the basic design of how cars work with their driver and the road. A car from much after 1950 (or, really, even the 1930s for many designs) has, to a first approximation, the same human interface and basic functionality as one from 2024, leaving aside any partial self driving features (which are brand new in any case). There has been a lot of innovation, but not in the controls or basic shape. This was a problem that was solved well enough that new solutions couldn't generate space. And yeah, they might be superior, but probably not all that superior. It's a lot more than just "cost of switching" and "everyone gave up". There was, in fact, little need to make larger changes. I know that's depressing if you're a researcher, and, yes, some promising innovations end up moribund... But they always did.
