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Re^2: perl and the age/art of convergence

by drfrog (Deacon)
on Oct 22, 2004 at 23:18 UTC ( [id://401725]=note: print w/replies, xml ) Need Help??


in reply to Re: perl and the age/art of convergence
in thread perl and the age/art of convergence

of course you could do all that with java or ???

more specifically what i mean is having a perl interpretter on a cell phone to run perl based applications on a cell phone//pda etc without leaving the pda/cellphone

im not sure if thats what your saying from above it sounds like you have a server somewhere you connect to via your pda/cellphone web browsing app?

when i speak of convergence i speak of it in terms of hardware such as in this article on convergence
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Re^3: perl and the age/art of convergence
by jdtoronto (Prior) on Oct 23, 2004 at 02:44 UTC
    drfrog

    The Business Week article you cite is, as usual with the mass media, some years behind the times. They only become interested in something when the "big boys" comeout to play.

    Convergence has been happening, not just in peoples dreams for years. Whilst the original proposals for a cellular phone system we floated in 1947 it wasn't until 1975 that Motorola filed for some patents and in 1977 AT&T had the first working system _in the USA_ functioning. But other researchers had working experimental systems in place in 1972 - they just got beaten to the punch by the Motorola behemoth. We had working cordless phones in 1969 - in the labs anyway. But none of the marketing guru's gave them a snow flakes chance in Hades of success until the 1980's. Well I recall being able to go to the 'loo' in 1973 with my cordless and elicit a shocked silence when I confirmed to the dis-believer on the other end of the conversation my location - as I flushed! In 1997 I wired a house with Cat-5 cable and piped ethernet from MP3 downloaders in various rooms back to a central server. I was told I was nuts. In 1987 I suspect that Karlheinz Brandenburg (co-inventor of MP3) was told he was a lunatic for thinking that people needed a compression system like that. Darn it, a lot of folk weren't even using CD's then!

    If you want to see an MP3/WiFi boom-box there was one working at a home in Australia in 1995. A colleague and I used some early 802.11 technology (from Harris as I recall, or maybe we ended up with Zilog), a 386 based CPU module running a DOS type system and with everything written in Borland Turbo/C 4.5 as I recall. We built it so that we could play music on his HiFi system in the living room and we could hear it wherever we were in the lab at his place, or in our main facility 300 metres away.

    I am sure others could tell you some stories of similar vein. I have spent nearly 30 years at the bleeding edge of technology - especially designing the hardware that makes it all work. Convergence has been here for years. It is just becoming sexy to talk about it now because it is affordable and the big boys can go and play.

    Me? I am happilly enjoying my WiFi headset radio that can tune in to broadcasters in Australia (my place of origin), the UK, US, Belgium and Canada as I wander about the neighbourhood. All called up at will from a streaming server in my office on the second floor of the house. Right now on the bench in my basement is a small screen LCD display on the back end of an 802.11g WiFi system that sends streaming video. I have a video capture card in a computer in the UK right now which relays the video to me here in Canada. My hope is to be able to watch the cricket without a 'tether' this year. Hopefully it will all be working in time for the Boxing Day test from Australia!

    Oh, and not a PDA or Blackberry in sight and my cell phone is about a 4 year old Nokia with nothing.

    Compared to the footprint of some of the systems the software Gods have tried to interest me in - Perl is a lightweight!

    jdtoronto

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