Yes, exactly the issue I am worrying about!  More companies need to be
developing within Apache, and the new book should help out the
situation a bit, but a new book isn't enough.  We also need to be at
the meetings, spreading the news about what it can do for them.  They
remember mostly that Apache delivers html and runs CGIs.

On 11/7/06, Joachim Zobel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Am Montag, den 06.11.2006, 09:25 -0800 schrieb Brian McQueen:
> This awesome Apache thing you guys created is beginning to slide into
> obscurity, when its actually better now than ever and should be moving
> more steadily into the forefront.  Its no mere web server!

This is the unfortunate social process that happens when a software
system reaches maturity. During this process the software gets harder to
use and develop. You end up with a system that is close to perfection,
but is used by a very small number of people.

VMS could do things, unix is still trying to reach today (versioning
file system, transparent clustering). Who uses TeX? The Oracle database
is probably on the same road, and there are quite shure others that come
to mind within a few minutes of thinking.

Apache is special because it is very widely used, but only a few people
know what it can actually do.

Sincerely,
Joachim



Reply via email to