I dream of a future with the release of a Loke 1.0 that is firmly
embedded in Pharo. A Loke that is quickly becoming the computing
environment of choice for millions of homeowners and schoolchildren.
Trygve
On 25.07.2019 18:34, Cédrick Béler wrote:
Me too !
And on the huge esug discussion points to have ^^
Cheers,
Cedrick
Le 25 juil. 2019 à 13:09, Marcus Denker <marcus.den...@inria.fr
<mailto:marcus.den...@inria.fr>> a écrit :
Looks very interesting! I will read it (it arrives just in time to be
part of the holiday reading pile…)
Marcus
On 25 Jul 2019, at 11:29, Trygve <tryg...@ifi.uio.no
<mailto:tryg...@ifi.uio.no>> wrote:
Dear all,
The final draft of my magnum opus about Personal Programming is now
ready for review:
http://folk.uio.no/trygver/themes/Personal/PP-019%20-%20Copy%20(17).pdf
The article's main theme is Personal Programming for everybody with
/Loke/, a personal object computer. Its first purpose is to empower
laypeople to take control over their corner of the Net with its IoT.
I have created a proof-of-concept implementation as a non-intrusive
extension of Squeak version 3.10.2, and have used it to demonstrate
how a novice uses the Loke IDE to create a small and intuitive program.
The article describes the concepts behind Loke .The current Squeak
implementation should be ported to Pharo and can grow into the
preferred Pharo-based IDE for laypeople taking control over their
information environment.
I will appreciate your possible comments before Aug. 31.
Enjoy
--Trygve
The article's 43 pages has several high points, I have included one
of them here:
----------- begin extract ------------------
C.7.We need a paradigm shift
The history of Western astronomy shows a series of paradigm shifts
from the geocentric paradigm with its stationary Earth as the center
of the Universe with its epicycles and other bizarre explanations of
what appeared to be essential complexities. Astronomy evolved via
the heliocentric to the current distributed paradigm with its chunks
of mass connected by gravity. What appeared as essential complexity
in one paradigm was easily resolved in the next.
It is tempting to look for similar paradigm shifts in computing.
Mainstream programming has based much of its theory and practice on
the CPU-centric paradigm exemplified by the von Neumann machine. A
memory-centric paradigm came in 1960 with the Autokon CAC/ CAM
system and its central database (Reenskaug, 1973). The solution was
obvious, and there must have been many similar initiatives without
me being aware of them.
It is time to realize that the first two paradigms do not meet our
current challenges: We are plagued with immensely large, complex,
and insecure systems that long ago left the realm of human
understanding. A recent example: Customers found that their bank
charged them twice for the same transaction. Several weeks after the
problem was discovered, the bank publicly admitted that they still
didn't understand how the problem could arise: The complexity of
their system was clearly beyond human comprehension. The bank has a
staff of very competent experts, but they need a better foundation
for modeling and implementing their sophisticated requirements.
Computers can transform, store, and communicate data, (Figure
below). The essence of the CPU-centric paradigm is that computers
are primarily used to transform data; they compute. The essence of
the memory-centric paradigm is that computers are used primarily to
store data; they organize applications around a shared database. The
essence of the communication-centric paradigm is that computers are
primarily used to exchange messages with other computers to make
them collaborate to achieve a common goal.
/The three paradigms of computing //
//<pbeopicbehdhbfmc.png>/
It is time to heed Tony Hoare's plea for simplicity and achieve a
better way of separating concerns. Mainstream programming should
shift to the communication-centric paradigm exemplified by the
object computer that is the foundation for this article.
The communication-centric paradigm has been on the horizon for many
years. I first met it in Prokon's idea of distributed computers
(Reenskaug, 1977), but there must have been many other initiatives.
A newer example is Service-Oriented Architectures (SOA) that, in
essence, is communication-centric. It didn't meet with immediate
success, possibly because people tried to apply it within the
CPU-centric paradigm where it doesn't belong. There are many other
examples such as distributed computing. And of course, DCI and the
IoT itself are, by definition, communication-centric.
----------- end extract ------------------
--
/The essence of object orientation is that objects collaborateto achieve
a goal. /
Trygve Reenskaug mailto: tryg...@ifi.uio.no <mailto:%20tryg...@ifi.uio.no>
Morgedalsvn. 5A http://folk.uio.no/trygver/
N-0378 Oslo http://fullOO.info
Norway Tel: (+47) 22 49 57 27