-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: [Politech] Replies to IPI fending off "attacks of open-sourcers" [ip]
Date: Thu, 15 Apr 2004 13:34:25 -0400
From: Tony Lauck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Declan McCullagh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
References: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
OSI failed for a number of reasons, but none of these involved billions of dollars being spent by telephone companies or other organizations on proprietary products. OSI was an unsuccessful attempt to develop a set of publicly available international standards which could be used by anyone to build interoperable networks.
OSI failed because it overreached the technical possibilities of its time, and attempted to do so within the straight-jacket of a bureaucratic multi-level international standardization process. In addition to being slow, this process continually added complexity as a method of political compromise. TCP/IP succeeded because it avoided the “second system syndrome” and because it had a small core of visionaries and decision makers who were able to keep most unneeded complexity out of the architecture until after it had achieved critical mass in the marketplace. Early U.S. Government funding was critical to creating and sustaining this critical mass.
Those pondering transition of central control of the Internet to international organizations ought to ponder the history of OSI.
Tony Lauck Manager of Network Architecture at Digital Equipment Corp., 1978-1994
Declan McCullagh wrote:
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: [Politech] IPI successfully(?) fends off "attacks of theopen-sourcers" [ip]
Date: Tue, 13 Apr 2004 15:15:11 -0400
From: William Allen Simpson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Organization: DayDreamer
To: Declan McCullagh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
References: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
In the marketplace, IP was a direct competitor to the private telephone
companies' OSI -- that failed miserably despite billions of dollars in
direct government investment, compared to a few measly millions in the
ARPAnet and NSFnet (predecessors of the commercial Internet).
Too broad a scope? How about the Point-to-Point Protocol, developed in open cooperation among a large number of companies, institutions, and individual consultants through the IETF. (As the Editor, I'm reasonably familiar with the specifics.) How was that derivative?
As an open source contributor, my PPP software proliferated into many projects, including proprietary products. And that's what allowed the "common user" to dial-up the Internet, leading to an entire industry of widespread Internet Service Providers. Mass market enough?
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