From: Ryan Lackey <rdl@mit.edu>
To: cypherpunks@ssz.com
Message Hash: ab716236c616e99f42cf93117d5978f8a8e307f0a581b63ce4cbb9aee3cef2b6
Message ID: <199801152210.RAA01721@the-great-machine.mit.edu>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1998-01-15 22:19:51 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 16 Jan 1998 06:19:51 +0800
From: Ryan Lackey <rdl@mit.edu>
Date: Fri, 16 Jan 1998 06:19:51 +0800
To: cypherpunks@ssz.com
Subject: E (the java extension, not MDMA)
Message-ID: <199801152210.RAA01721@the-great-machine.mit.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
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After someone mentioned "E", Electric Communities (http://www.communities.com/)
enhancement to the Java security model/language/etc., I checked it out
It looks useful for a distributed agents based system (which is what
I'm shooting for...the long-awaited goals mailing will either get sent
today or tomorrow, depending on if I fall asleep immediately after sending
this).
I don't think anyone will argue that it's inherently bad. However, I'm
interested in knowing what people think about using a vaguely proprietary
product (albeit from a company with lots of cool people) in a piece of
software like a reference Eternity implementation. I personally would prefer
to stick to something as standard as possible, but E has a lot of features
I'd want to use, and would end up re-implementing on my own.
(I think if you had a JVM interface to eternity such that an object, its
currency, where it should send its results, etc. in a standard form
(the standard eternity agent encapsulation) were encapsulated, you
could build a lot of Eternity out of interacting agents inside another
Eternity implemention, inside ... up to inside a traditional network.
(more on this idea later))
So, this is very rambling -- I mostly wonder how people feel about using
a fairly non-standard language extension in something like Eternity.
Ryan
[ObDentistry: Wisdom teeth *really* suck. I want drugs.]
- --
Ryan Lackey
rdl@mit.edu
http://mit.edu/rdl/
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1998-01-15 (Fri, 16 Jan 1998 06:19:51 +0800) - E (the java extension, not MDMA) - Ryan Lackey <rdl@mit.edu>