- From: Prasad Wagle <Prasad.Wagle@eng.sun.com>
- Date: Fri, 8 Dec 1995 17:06:36 +0800
- To: www-talk@w3.org
According to Bob Metcalfe (Ethernet inventor and 3Com founder): "Unless [Berners-Lee, Andressen, and the Unix world] can keep their Web standards act together, they will lose the Web to the Windows Microsoft Network in the same way they lost Unix to DOS...MSN is making its play to replace Berners-Lee's Web standards with its own under Blackbird." OLE/COM is Microsoft's standard for distributed objects and component software. OLE is the compound document standard and COM is the distributed object bus. If OLE/COM becomes a de facto standard, the language used for the components will be of secondary importance. The software industry will once again be at Microsoft's mercy. The industry's answer to COM is CORBA. The industry desperately needs a compound document standard as powerful as OLE. One option is OpenDoc. The W3C is also working on a compound document standard based on HTML. "The Essential Distributed Objects Survival Guide" by Orfali, Harkey, and Edwards is an excellent introductory book on this topic. The conclusion of the book is: "CORBA/OpenDoc is technically superior to COM/OLE. However, if the industry does not build a component market infrastructure, CORBA/OpenDoc will fail. Microsoft will impose on the industry its ORB and component standards." So I would urge ISVs to work with W3C and OMG on open standards for distributed objects and component software. In my opinion, this is a better long-term solution compared to the short-term solution of using proprietary standards like OLE. I know the problems involved with standards-development process. I am working on the SPEC industry standard Web server benchmark. However, I still believe in the long term value of open standards. I would like to hear your thoughts on this issue. Regards, Prasad PS. Information on the W3C site: http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/DesignIssues/DistObjApps.html
Received on Friday, 8 December 1995 20:06:01 UTC