How about Kerberos? Can we get a team to look closely at bringing integration for enterprise users? That would be helpful, or can you just put it behind a Kerberos wrapper? If that would work, collecting a demo, that could unlock more corporate wallets , for investment.
- HH On Fri, Oct 27, 2017 at 16:41, henry <[he...@callistohouse.club]("mailto:he...@callistohouse.club")> wrote: > How is there no steering committee to accumulate wrapping 3rd party libraries > in Alien to gain benefits of code in other languages? Do not assume that code > is not extremely well written in that particular language for that particular > task and that particular deployment mechanism. > > Can Pharo be called as a shared library from Java JNA? > > - HH > > On Fri, Oct 27, 2017 at 15:47, Andrew Glynn > <[aglyn...@gmail.com]("mailto:aglyn...@gmail.com")> wrote: > >> I’m not claiming I don’t or haven’t been affected, only that I no long allow >> myself to be. Does that cause issues? Of course. But I’d rather deal with >> those than do things I don’t enjoy. However I only got to that point after >> 26 years in the industry, so I don’t expect that everyone will feel that way. >> >> Cheers >> >> Andrew >> >> Sent from [Mail]("https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986") for >> Windows 10 >> >> From: [jtuc...@objektfabrik.de]("mailto:jtuc...@objektfabrik.de") >> Sent: Thursday, October 26, 2017 8:14 AM >> To: [pharo-users@lists.pharo.org]("mailto:pharo-users@lists.pharo.org") >> Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Smalltalk Argument >> >> Andrew, >> >> Am 26.10.17 um 00:46 schrieb Andrew Glynn: >> >>> There’s other questions that are relevant to me: >> >> I am glad you opened your words with this sentence. Other peoples’ mileages >> may vary a lot. >> >>> Do I give a f*** about cool looking web apps? No, I don’t use web apps if >>> in any way I can avoid it. >> >> Some people can’t. I can’t. I am making my living with a web based >> application. And I like it. >> >>> Do I give a f*** about mobile apps? No, the screen’s too small to read >>> anything longer than a twit, or anyone with anything worthwhile to say.> >> >> So you are in the lucky position that neither mobile nor web nor integration >> matters to you or you have enough resources to do all that stuff yourself. I >> am envyous. I need to build web pages and people ask me whether we can ship >> an iPhone App. I do customer-facing stuff and sex sells much more than we >> like to think. >> >> Your comments on the crappiness of libs in other languages is a great fit >> for Smalltalk. Not invented here, therefor rubbish. We came a long way with >> this way of thinking. But these rubbish makers dance circles around us while >> we try to do our first hello world for an iPad. They laugh at us when we try >> to reinvent MVC on top of Seaside (although MVC is closesly related to >> Smalltalk). Because they are back home and watch Netflix while we debug our >> homegrown base libraries that are, of course, much better than theirs >> because they are written in Smalltalk. >> >> I am not arguing that maintaining Smalltalk code is far superior to most >> technolgies out there. But depending on the needs of our projects we have to >> learn and use those crappy technologies to accomplish what they offer. >> Because, sometimes (especially if you have to pay bills), an existing >> library with flaws is better than none. >> >> So if I have to use Javascript or C# or Dart or Swift to do the frontend >> part of my system, is there still much benefit in using these together with >> Smalltalk? Or is there - at least from a manager’s point of view - not a >> reasonable amount of sense in choosing the frontend technology also for the >> logic and compensate the loss in productivity with a gain in avoided >> complexity? >> >> Your answer delivers a lot of food for thought, but I don’t buy all of it. >> And I don’t expect you to buy all of mine ;-) >> >> Joachim >> >>> >>> >>> Do I give a f*** about the number of libraries in other languages? No, >>> because most of them are crap in every language I’ve had to work in, and >>> the base languages are crap so they have to keep changing radically, and >>> libraries and frameworks therefore also have to and never get any better. >>> The few that are worthwhile I can almost always use from Smalltalk without >>> a problem (read, Blender, ACT-R and Synapse, since every other >>> library/framework I’ve used outside Smalltalk has been a waste of time). >>> >>> Do I give a f*** about implementing a complex piece of machine learning >>> software in 22 hours, compared to 3 months for the Java version? Well, >>> actually yes, I do, because that was 3 months of my life down the toilet >>> for something that is too slow to be useful in Java. >>> >>> Any argument depends on your priorities. I’ve written tons of web apps, >>> because I needed to get paid. I’ve written better shitty mobile apps than >>> the average shitty mobile apps. However, I’m not going to do any of that >>> any longer in crap that never improves, because after 26 years the >>> irritability it produces is more than it’s worth. >>> >>> A few weeks ago, a recruiter that specializes in Smalltalk called me about >>> a job, although they were well aware I live 1500 miles away from the city I >>> lived in when I had worked through them, to see if I’d be willing to move >>> back there for a job. That sounds like another ‘there aren’t enough >>> Smalltalk developers", but it wasn’t, because the job wasn’t writing >>> Smalltalk. It was writing Java. >>> >>> The person hiring, though, wouldn’t look at anyone who didn’t write >>> Smalltalk, because "people who grew up with Java don’t know how to write >>> code". I don’t agree with that, I’ve known a (very few) good Java >>> developers. I would say, though, that I’ve known far more incompetent ones >>> than good ones, and I can’t think of any incompetent Smalltalk developers >>> off the top of my head. >>> >>> Nor have I ever heard a developer in Smalltalk, or Haskell, or LISP, or >>> even C, complain about how hard maintaining state is or coming up with >>> various hacks to avoid it, which seems to be the main point of every >>> JavaScript based ‘technology’. An application is by definition a >>> state-machine, which implies plenty about JS developers on the whole. >>> >>> If you’re a good developer you can write good code in (nearly) anything. >>> My question then is why would you want to write in crap? The better >>> question is why aren’t there more good developers in any language? >>> >>> Every project I have been able to do in Smalltalk, though, has had one >>> thing in common, the "shit has to work". Companies do use it, in fact I >>> could name 4 large enterprises I’ve worked for who’ve written their own >>> dialects, and they all use it only when "shit has to work". They know it’s >>> more productive, they also know using it for more things would increase the >>> availability of Smalltalk developers. >>> >>> Why do they not do it? One reason, though it takes a while to recognize >>> it, because management doesn’t admit even to themselves why they do it, or >>> not very often. Being inefficient, as long as it doesn’t ‘really’ matter, >>> is an advantage to large enterprises because they have resources smaller >>> competitors don’t. >>> >>> Why don’t their competitors do it? Because they can’t see past an hourly >>> rate, what’s fashionable, or just new, or because their customers can’t. >>> Put more generally, average stupidity that isn’t corrected by the market. >>> Fashion affects smaller companies more than larger ones, because they can’t >>> afford a few customers walking away because they wanted an app in Electron, >>> even if they can’t give any relevant reason for wanting it, and even the >>> samples on the Electron site don’t work. >>> >>> Enterprises can, and do use Smalltalk when it matters. When it doesn’t, >>> it’s to their advantage to promote things that are inefficient, buggy and >>> unreliable. >>> >>> Cost is relevant, but not in the simple way people look at things. A >>> crucial but rarely mentioned perspective on its relevance is that while >>> Java based software runs TV set top boxes, Smalltalk based software runs >>> things like medical equipment, automated defense systems, tanks, etc. Cost >>> becomes largely irrelevant when ‘shit has to work’. >>> >>> Productivity is primarily relevant to less talented developers, in an >>> inversely sense, since unproductive environments and attitudes have a >>> leveling tendency in general, and more specifically make accomplishing what >>> the less talented are capable of in any environment sufficiently laborious >>> for them to have a role. Capability in Smalltalk, as implied by the person >>> hiring for the Java role I mentioned, is a fairly decent means of judging >>> whether someone is a so-so developer or a good one. >>> >>> The productivity argument is realistically only relevant in the context of >>> an already higher hourly cost. Given that it is relevant at that point, >>> companies that know Smalltalk is more productive would use it outside >>> things that have to be 100%, if their own productivity were relevant to the >>> same degree that competitors’ productivity is inversely relevant. >>> >>> All these ways of looking at it are contingent perspectives though. Yes, >>> if the number of libraries is relevant to you, Smalltalk is less >>> attractive, but that’s only a contingent phenomenon based on the relative >>> popularity of Java and JavaScript, as a result it can’t be used as >>> explanatory for that popularity. All the ways of looking at it that are >>> fully determinate are determinate via contingencies of that kind, which for >>> the most part are precisely the other perspectives, including productivity, >>> cost, availability of developers, etc. None of them is in itself anything >>> but a result of the others. >>> >>> If availability of developers is contingent on popularity (and further, >>> popularity contingent on industry attitudes), to use an example already >>> mentioned in Joachim’s post, then his simultaneous posit of library >>> availability is if anything more contingent on the same popularity, so >>> positing it as a cause and not a result, or merely a correlate, of >>> popularity is incoherent. We can go one step further, and demonstrate that >>> even when large enterprises make something that works reliably available, >>> they fail to promote and support it, which destroys the market for reliable >>> tooling by simultaneously owning it while not promoting it, something IBM >>> is particularly good at. But IBM can’t (and if they can’t, neither can any >>> other company) operate that way without the tacit agreement of the industry. >>> >>> To understand it in a more general way, software development has to be >>> looked at in the context where it occurs, and how it’s determined to a >>> large degree by that context, with a specific difference. That difference >>> is itself implicit in the context, i.e. capitalism, but only purely >>> effective in software development. It’s a result of virtualization as an >>> implicit goal of capitalism, and the disruptions implicit in the virtual >>> but so far only realized completely in software. In terms of that >>> understanding, the analysis of virtualization and disruption as inherent to >>> capitalism is better accomplished in Kapital than in any more recent work. >>> >>> Or you can simply decide, as I’ve done recently, that working in ways and >>> with tools that prevent doing good work in a reasonable timeframe isn’t >>> worthwhile to you, no matter how popular those ways and tools might be, or >>> what the posited reasons are, since at the end popularity is only insofar >>> as it already is. What those tools and methods are depends to a degree on >>> your priorities, but if developers are engineers those priorities can’t be >>> completely arbitrary. Engineers are defined by their ability to make >>> things work. >>> >>> Software as virtual is inherently disruptive, and the software industry >>> disrupts itself too often and too easily to build on anything. A further >>> disruption caused by developers, as engineers, refusing to work with crap >>> that doesn’t, i.e. insisting on being engineers, while in itself merely an >>> aggravation of the disruptive tendencies, might have an inverse result. >>> >>> Using a stable core of technologies as the basis for a more volatile set of >>> products, in the way nearly every other industry does, is the best means we >>> know of to build things both flexibly and reasonably efficiently. The >>> computer hardware industry is the extreme example of this, while the >>> software industry is the extreme contradiction. >>> >>> From: Pharo-users >>> [<pharo-users-boun...@lists.pharo.org>]("mailto:pharo-users-boun...@lists.pharo.org") >>> on behalf of David Mason [<dma...@ryerson.ca>]("mailto:dma...@ryerson.ca") >>> Reply-To: Any question about pharo is welcome >>> [<pharo-users@lists.pharo.org>]("mailto:pharo-users@lists.pharo.org") >>> Date: Tuesday, October 24, 2017 at 11:52 AM >>> To: Any question about pharo is welcome >>> [<pharo-users@lists.pharo.org>]("mailto:pharo-users@lists.pharo.org") >>> Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Smalltalk Argument >>> >>> PharoJS is working to give you that mobile app/browser app experience. As >>> with others, we’re not there yet, but getting there. See >>> [http://pharojs.org]("http://pharojs.org") >>> >>> The 67% loved means that 67% of people using Smalltalk (or perhaps have >>> ever used it) want to continue - so it’s presumably a high percentage of a >>> smallish number of people. >>> >>> On 20 October 2017 at 03:23, >>> [jtuc...@objektfabrik.de]("mailto:jtuc...@objektfabrik.de") >>> <[jtuc...@objektfabrik.de]("mailto:jtuc...@objektfabrik.de")> wrote: >>> >>>> First of all: I’d say the question itself is not a question but an excuse. >>>> I am not arguing there are enough Smalltalkers or cheap ones. But I think >>>> the question is just a way of saying "we don’t want to do it for reasons >>>> that we ourselves cannot really express". If you are a good developer, >>>> learning Smalltalk is easy. If you are a good developer you’ve heard the >>>> sentence "we’ve taken the goos parts from x,y,z and Smalltalk" at least >>>> twice a year. So you most likely would like to learn it anyways. >>>> >>>> A shortage of developers doesn’t exist. What exists is an unwillingness of >>>> companies to get people trained in a technology. If Smalltalk was cool and >>>> great in their opinion, they wouldn’t care. It’s that simple. As a >>>> consultant, I’ve heard that argument so often. Not ferom Startups, but >>>> from insurance companies, Banks or Car manufacturers who spend millions on >>>> useless, endless meetings and stuff instead of just hiring somebody to >>>> teach a couple of developers Smalltalk. It’s just a lie: the shortage of >>>> Smalltalk developers is not a problem. >>>> >>>> And, to be honest: what is it we actually are better in by using Smalltalk? >>>> Can we build cool looking web apps in extremely short time? No. >>>> Can we build mobile Apps with little effort? No. >>>> Does our Smalltalk ship lots of great libraries for all kinds of things >>>> that are not availabel in similar quality in any other language? >>>> Are we lying when we say we are so extremely over-productive as compared >>>> to other languages? >>>> >>>> I know, all that live debugging stuff and such is great and it is much >>>> faster to find & fix a bug in Smalltalk than in any other environment I’ve >>>> used so far. But that is really only true for business code. When I need >>>> to connect to things or want to build a modern GUI or a web application >>>> with a great look&feel, I am nowhere near productive, because I simply >>>> have to build my own stuff or learn how to use other external resources. >>>> If I want to build something for a mobile device, I will only hear that >>>> somebody somewhere has done it before. No docs, no proof, no ready-made >>>> tool for me. >>>> >>>> Shortage of developers is not really the problem. If Smalltalk was as cool >>>> as we like to make ourselves believe, this problem would be non-existent. >>>> If somebody took out their iPad and told an audience: "We did this in >>>> Smalltalk in 40% of the time it would have taken in Swift", and if that >>>> something was a must-have for people, things would be much easier. But >>>> nobody has. >>>> >>>> I am absolutely over-exaggerating, because I make my living with an SaaS >>>> product written in Smalltalk (not Pharo). I have lots of fun with >>>> Smalltalk and - as you - am convince that many parts of what we’ve done so >>>> far would’ve taken much longer or even be impossible in other languages. >>>> But the advantage was eaten by our extremely steep learning curve for web >>>> technologies and for building something that works almost as well as tools >>>> like Angular or jQuery Mobile. >>>> >>>> Smalltalk is cool, and the day somebody shows me something like Google’s >>>> flutter in Smalltalk, I am ready to bet a lot on a bright future for >>>> Smalltalk. But until then, I’d say these arguments about productivity are >>>> just us trying to make ourselves believe we’re still the top of the food >>>> chain. We’ve done that for almost thirty years now and still aren’t ready >>>> to stop it. But we’ve been lying to ourselves and still do so. >>>> >>>> I don’t think there is a point in discussing about the usefulness of a >>>> language using an argument like the number or ready-made developers. That >>>> is just an argument they know you can’t win. The real question is and >>>> should be: what is the benefit of using Smalltalk. Our productivity >>>> argument is a lie as soon as we have to build something that uses or runs >>>> on technology that has been invented after 1990. >>>> >>>> Okay, shoot ;-) >>>> >>>> Joachim >>>> >>>> — >>>> ———————————————————————— >>>> Objektfabrik Joachim Tuchel >>>> mailto:[jtuc...@objektfabrik.de]("mailto:jtuc...@objektfabrik.de") >>>> Fliederweg 1 >>>> [http://www.objektfabrik.de]("http://www.objektfabrik.de") >>>> D-71640 Ludwigsburg >>>> [http://joachimtuchel.wordpress.com]("http://joachimtuchel.wordpress.com") >>>> Telefon: [+49 7141 56 10 86 0]("tel:%2B49%207141%2056%2010%2086%200") >>>> Fax: [+49 7141 56 10 86 1]("tel:%2B49%207141%2056%2010%2086%201") >> >> — >> >> ———————————————————————— >> >> Objektfabrik Joachim Tuchel >> [mailto:jtuc...@objektfabrik.de]("mailto:jtuc...@objektfabrik.de") >> >> Fliederweg 1 >> [http://www.objektfabrik.de]("http://www.objektfabrik.de") >> >> D-71640 Ludwigsburg >> [http://joachimtuchel.wordpress.com]("http://joachimtuchel.wordpress.com") >> >> Telefon: +49 7141 56 10 86 0 Fax: +49 7141 56 10 86 1