DATA SIMPLIFICATION: Substandard Standards

Over the next few weeks, I will be writing on topics related to my latest book, Data Simplification: Taming Information With Open Source Tools (release date March 23, 2016). I hope I can convince you that this is a book worth reading. Blog readers can use the discount code: COMP315 for a 30% discount, at checkout."The nice thing about standards is that you have so many to choose from." -Andrew S. Tanenbaum Data standards are the false gods of informatics. They promise miracles, but they can't deliver. The biggest drawback of standards is that they change all the time. If you take the time to read some of the computer literature from the 1970s or 1980s, you will come across the names of standards that have long-since fallen into well-deserved obscurity. You may find that the literature from the 1970s is nearly impossible to read with any level of comprehension, due to the large number of now-obsolete standards-related acronyms scattered through every page. Today's eternal standard is tomorrow's indecipherable gibberish (1). The Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) was an internet protocol created in 1977 with approval from the International Organization for Standardization. It has been supplanted by TCP/IP, the protocol that everyone uses today. A hand full of programming languages have been recognized as standards by the American National Standards Institute. These include Basic, C,, Ada and Mumps. Basic and C are still popular languages. Ada, recommended by the Feder...
Source: Specified Life - Category: Information Technology Tags: complexity computer science data analysis data repurposing data simplification data wrangling information science simplifying data specifications standards taming data Source Type: blogs