Return-Path: Received: from murder ([unix socket]) by eikenes.alvestrand.no (Cyrus v2.2.8-Mandrake-RPM-2.2.8-4.2.101mdk) with LMTPA; Thu, 31 Mar 2005 21:28:09 +0200 X-Sieve: CMU Sieve 2.2 Received: from localhost (localhost.localdomain [127.0.0.1]) by eikenes.alvestrand.no (Postfix) with ESMTP id 075AF61B53 for ; Thu, 31 Mar 2005 21:28:09 +0200 (CEST) Received: from eikenes.alvestrand.no ([127.0.0.1]) by localhost (eikenes.alvestrand.no [127.0.0.1]) (amavisd-new, port 10024) with ESMTP id 08355-02 for ; Thu, 31 Mar 2005 21:28:02 +0200 (CEST) Received: from megatron.ietf.org (megatron.ietf.org [132.151.6.71]) by eikenes.alvestrand.no (Postfix) with ESMTP id B4E7A61AF7 for ; Thu, 31 Mar 2005 21:28:01 +0200 (CEST) Received: from localhost.localdomain ([127.0.0.1] helo=megatron.ietf.org) by megatron.ietf.org with esmtp (Exim 4.32) id 1DH5Ha-000333-0D; Thu, 31 Mar 2005 14:24:46 -0500 Received: from odin.ietf.org ([132.151.1.176] helo=ietf.org) by megatron.ietf.org with esmtp (Exim 4.32) id 1DH5HW-00032p-5z for ltru@megatron.ietf.org; Thu, 31 Mar 2005 14:24:42 -0500 Received: from ietf-mx.ietf.org (ietf-mx.ietf.org [132.151.6.1]) by ietf.org (8.9.1a/8.9.1a) with ESMTP id OAA25508 for ; Thu, 31 Mar 2005 14:24:41 -0500 (EST) Received: from [63.247.76.194] (helo=montage.altserver.com) by ietf-mx.ietf.org with esmtp (Exim 4.33) id 1DH5Oh-0003eV-1B for ltru@ietf.org; Thu, 31 Mar 2005 14:32:07 -0500 Received: from lns-p19-4-idf-82-65-253-170.adsl.proxad.net ([82.65.253.170] helo=jfc.afrac.org) by montage.altserver.com with esmtpa (Exim 4.44) id 1DH5HT-0006eU-8v; Thu, 31 Mar 2005 11:24:40 -0800 Message-Id: <6.1.2.0.2.20050331201305.042e0c60@mail.jefsey.com> X-Sender: jefsey+jefsey.com@mail.jefsey.com X-Mailer: QUALCOMM Windows Eudora Version 6.1.2.0 Date: Thu, 31 Mar 2005 21:15:00 +0200 To: "L.Gillam" , ltru From: "JFC (Jefsey) Morfin" Subject: RE: [Ltru] is there some wiskey in the jar - [was: Registry in record-jar format] In-Reply-To: <4A7C6FA2AB31194E80E13FE585F6A21292A1CE@EVS-EC1-NODE1.surre y.ac.uk> References: <4A7C6FA2AB31194E80E13FE585F6A21292A1CE@EVS-EC1-NODE1.surrey.ac.uk> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed X-AntiAbuse: This header was added to track abuse, please include it with any abuse report X-AntiAbuse: Primary Hostname - montage.altserver.com X-AntiAbuse: Original Domain - ietf.org X-AntiAbuse: Originator/Caller UID/GID - [47 12] / [47 12] X-AntiAbuse: Sender Address Domain - jefsey.com X-Scan-Signature: d2b46e3b2dfbff2088e0b72a54104985 Cc: X-BeenThere: ltru@lists.ietf.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.5 Precedence: list List-Id: Language Tag Registry Update working group discussion list List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , Sender: ltru-bounces@lists.ietf.org Errors-To: ltru-bounces@lists.ietf.org X-Virus-Scanned: amavisd-new at alvestrand.no At 19:59 31/03/2005, L.Gillam wrote: >Also, where did you discover that Moore's law was a "joke"? Not from >Intel, surely? (http://www.intel.com/research/silicon/mooreslaw.htm) Moore law applies to computers not to networks. On networks Metcalfe and Reeds laws are to be used as a never reached limit or as a maximum filtering. >appily, the law of Moore does not necessarily apply. >While applying Moore's law to every situation does not necessarily fit, >technology moves quickly. UDC, and its predecessor, was a good example of >a large system of identifiers in existence before any of the web >technologies. The truth, I suspect, is a consideration of technological >capabilities and advances alongside expectations of growth. But these are >both predictions, and we know what the problem with prediction is. Now, >you suggested that an "IANA considerations" section needs to predict how >many accesses such a registry will have, right? Based perhaps on the >frequency of access of the list that goes along with RFC 3066? Can you >point to somewhere that this has been done already? I'm interested in how >people have made such predictions in these documents - predicting system >loading is an interesting topic. I have no other model to offer than existing systems. This is why I ask and why I worry. I do not document, I ask it to be documented. There is to date no other request to IANA such as some of the discussed propositions. IMHO the IANA is not conceptually what fits these demands. I just want to understand first what is the demand. This Draft is made to address specific application needs: I just ask how will this applications operate. What are the risks of usage creep. >As a network architect, perhaps you also have good suggestions to make for >how to handle a distributed registry that would reduce infrastructural >requirements and help to fulfill such a requirement. Though you seemed to >dismiss John Cowan's (or somebody else's) suggestions of cacheing. I am open to every suggestion. But first I want to understand the problem. Who is accessing, for what purpose, the length and the size of the transaction. For example caching what, where, when, for how long. I documented long caching in using a langtags file and yearly update??? >Is your concern purely financial? My concern is also financial. There is a necessary compromise between cost, quality of the service, volume of access, procedures, ways to limiting traffic. I want to understand first what we are talking about. So, I ask. > > In your reasoning, the law of Reed applies(from each language to each > language) > >If it did, we'd have a massive amount of languages based on every person >possibly speaking to every other person in the world. We have standards of >terminology in specific areas. The contrast between these 2 statements >seems to be very relevant to such considerations. Perhaps the former is >why you suggest significant loading on systems? I am not sure that impact of every language to every language is so important on the resulting load (but again I have yet no real idea of when people will access, why, etc. and I mean in real life, not in theory: we all know that real use if far bigger than the supposed one). My rational is that when two people want to talk they talk, whatever the language. But obviously there is certainly an impact. If someone updates his tables every time it calls someone, the impact is zero, but if he does it only when he calls a new language, if he speaks only one language, no impact, but if he speaks 10 languages the impact if 10 times more, plus possible errors. >Are you suggesting to "do away" with ASCII? Why does an ASCII solution for >language tagging pose a problem? The tag provides the interoperability - >what it "stands in place of" requires representation (its human-readable >name in given a language and associated data). The multilinguality of >which you speak would be its representation, not its tag. Call the airport >what you want, your luggage tag will have 3 letters and be in ASCII. There is no use in having to enter/read something which is not on your keyboard. People at the Airport can type ASCII - for the time being as probably RFID will change many things. Not end users. > > Lang5tag is no problem managing as such: it happens to be > > well managed for centuries by every library. No need for the IANA. > >Where is it documented? How do people use it for interoperability? Who >ensures it is well maintained? No one. You know the Babel symbolism: it is precisely to free people from the one who wanted things to be well maintained. So people are free to do it the way they want. So there is no single point of failure. 7520 languages are the way to make us free from someone ensuring maintenance. This is for us to feel secure we found a reliable way to be stable, secure and innovative without having to rely on a single one, with all the possible cross verifications, which will insure us that our system is well maintained. More complex, smarter, more work to find it? Probably yes. >I've no experiences of libraries that use such a systems. I am also >intrigued by your suggestion that it's less complex than what you refer to >as a lang3tag, when what you identify as lang5tag seems to be an extension >of lang3tag. Open a dictionary. It will tell you five things about every word, plus information on the meaning, nature and syntax: - the language (on the cover) - the script (you see it) - where it was published (ISSN-ISBN) or the title - the author (on the cover) - either it is standard style by default, or it mentions the style: fam. pop, old, etc. > > you are not taking care of the needs of others (like me) There are many needs to consider. 1. application needs. The only considered needs are XML/HTML pages by W3C and some CLDR needs? OPES, DNS, Web Services, History, Users communities, CRC, etc. and innovation. 2. there is not such a thing as a "wider community". There are machines, bandwidth, operators, etc. These people need a budget and someone to pay for this budget. In the case of the IANA the budget is the ICANN budget. ICANN need to collect that money. I am one of those who are asked to pay. I suggest you access the ICANN strategic plan for the years to come http://nuts/strategic-plan/strategic-plan-v6.pdf and search for IANA. It will give you a fair understanding of what ICANN intents to pay when you compare the number of times RIRs, DNS and Parameters and quoted. >What exactly are these needs that you allude to? I don't consider these to >be clear. A number of others have asked this also. I'm not sure people can >realistically take an individual's budget into consideration when they aim >to provide something for the wider community. Should the tail wag the dog? Depends what is the tail what is the dog. This is precisely what I want to determine. Let assume that one of the self regulation of IANA load is the delay in getting a IANA response. Let assume that the delay is 1 minutes. Is this acceptable? Is this because there a lot abandon? Is this not draining resources on developing countries more than larger bandwidth countries? etc. Again, at this time we do not discuss a solution. We just need to understand if there is a problem (I am surprised nobody came in saying: there is no problem because ....). Roughly there are comments saying "on OS installation" - I do not know why, nor the size of the access. But with usual 10 times markup this means 3 to 4 billions a year increasing. I do not know the size, but I tend to think the lower the size the greater the number of accesses? My first real concern is why do I need the IANA for? Let take the DNS. The IANA delivers the Master file to the Alpha Machine and to the Internic, and the Whois file online. I would be very interested in IANA documenting the load each represents. jfc _______________________________________________ Ltru mailing list Ltru@lists.ietf.org https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ltru