I've booked metaphysics.io and read the TDD/rhetoric article.
I see his pt. regarding people using "lores" like (ESR's writing or 37signals) to promote their ideas. The funny thing is had I encountered this article randomly on HN, I'd have not registered the whole "lore"-bit and skipped right to the milli-second benchmarks the author presented and the code snippets. But the truth is, by using the whole lore, the author has already primed me to think that the TDD mocking practice is somewhat flawed; the code snippets themselves just become the window dressing. But I'd have came away satisfied with myself looking at the numbers "objectively".
I found it highly interesting that the book was published at the dawn of Facebook (April 2004) where Galloway focused on the gov't and commercial cabal (Oracle, Sun, Microsoft, Cisco, Network Solutions) on driving networking protocol standards, Java standards and RFC comittee's. Using Foccault's panopticon as the device, he painted almost an "1984"-like dystopia. Of course, in 2014 where we have BuzzFeed, Facebook, Instagram, Snapshot combined with NSA and Edward Snowden, but also a MSFT led by an Indian guy who wants run .net ecosystem like Apache, I'm not sure whether we are living in an Stallman-Communist state, NSA-Authoritarian state or Soma-Facebook-Brave New World state.
What's more interesting to me however is a programmer's role in all of this. Steve Levy's "Hacker," "2600" and cyberpunk seems to be far away in today's HBO's "Silicon Valley" and accelerator culture, just like the 80's. I'm hoping that grunge will happen in response to the Sex Pistols though.
I've booked metaphysics.io and read the TDD/rhetoric article.
I see his pt. regarding people using "lores" like (ESR's writing or 37signals) to promote their ideas. The funny thing is had I encountered this article randomly on HN, I'd have not registered the whole "lore"-bit and skipped right to the milli-second benchmarks the author presented and the code snippets. But the truth is, by using the whole lore, the author has already primed me to think that the TDD mocking practice is somewhat flawed; the code snippets themselves just become the window dressing. But I'd have came away satisfied with myself looking at the numbers "objectively".
Also looked up Galloway and remembered that I skimmed a bit of this 4 years ago: http://www.amazon.com/Protocol-Control-Exists-Decentralizati...
I found it highly interesting that the book was published at the dawn of Facebook (April 2004) where Galloway focused on the gov't and commercial cabal (Oracle, Sun, Microsoft, Cisco, Network Solutions) on driving networking protocol standards, Java standards and RFC comittee's. Using Foccault's panopticon as the device, he painted almost an "1984"-like dystopia. Of course, in 2014 where we have BuzzFeed, Facebook, Instagram, Snapshot combined with NSA and Edward Snowden, but also a MSFT led by an Indian guy who wants run .net ecosystem like Apache, I'm not sure whether we are living in an Stallman-Communist state, NSA-Authoritarian state or Soma-Facebook-Brave New World state.
What's more interesting to me however is a programmer's role in all of this. Steve Levy's "Hacker," "2600" and cyberpunk seems to be far away in today's HBO's "Silicon Valley" and accelerator culture, just like the 80's. I'm hoping that grunge will happen in response to the Sex Pistols though.