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- From: domo@uk.co.sphinx (Dominic Dunlop)
-
- I'm all in favour of Usenix' effort to summarise progress and by-play
- in a number of standaridisation forums. It has been commented firstly that
- the summaries show the effect of editorial decisions, and secondly that
- editorial input -- whether explicit or implicit -- is a necessary part of
- the production of any summary -- particularly a useful summary. I can't
- find any fault in either of those statements.
-
- The only way to know exactly what is going on in any one forum is to
- participate in its activities yourself. If the activities of a particular
- group are vitally important to you, I urge you to participate. You'll find
- yourself being roped into the work of the group, and that's all to the
- good -- Parkinson's Law applies in committee work as in other aspects of
- life. You'll also get to have some interesting meals with interesting
- people in interesting places. (The same applies to drinks, if that appeals
- to you.) What's more, participate now, and you may get to write reports
- for Usenix, so involving yourself in the editorial process! In my
- experience, the most difficult aspect of participation is getting somebody
- to pick up the tab -- although some people with more devotion than I have
- been known to pay out of their own pockets in order to attend!
-
- The trouble with participating in a group is that you get to know only
- about the activities of that group, and possibly those peripheral areas
- of other group which ahve an effect your own work. There simply are not
- enough hours in the day (or synapses in the brain, particularly after
- experiencing some of those drinks) for any one person to participate
- even in all the activities taking place under the Posix umbrella, never
- mind getting involved with other bodies such as ANSI, EWOS (who?), ISO,
- JIS... (and anyway, the expense would be horrendous).
-
- As a result, in order to get anything like a global picture of what's going
- on, it's essential to rely on summaries. To make a large and pontifical
- generalisation, it seems to me that one of the main ways in which things
- get done in this world is through decisions made on the basis of a
- knowledge of summaries, rather than through an intimate knowledge of the
- details of a particular aspect of a particular situation. Politicians are
- briefed on many topics by experts; managers act on the basis of reports
- from their juniors; people send money in response to pictures of a disaster
- on TV. All of these sources of information involve an editorial element,
- and it's that which makes them more, rather than less, useful. More power
- to Usenix' elbow for its much-needed initiative in applying this concept to
- standards activities.
-
- (Another reason that things get done is that driven people just go ahead
- and do them anyway...)
- --
- Dominic Dunlop
- domo@sphinx.co.uk domo@riddle.uucp
-
- Volume-Number: Volume 15, Number 60
-
-