Teaching a horse not to eat
My friend Ole told me this story many moons ago - and many times since:
A man decided to teach his horse not to eat anymore. Gradually he reduced the amount of food the horse got each day, and the programme worked really well.
Unfortunately, just as he had finally taught the horse not to eat at all something unforeseen and tragic happened to the horse and it died suddenly.
I was reminded of the story the other day when I was studying this article in my beloved The Economist (I've subscribed non-stop since 1983):
"Jan Ivarsson, head of safety at Volvo, believes it should be possible to build a car in which people will not be killed or injured."
On the other hand I can read in various newspapers that Volvo is not doing too well, and may in fact soon be either sold or closed, just like Saab. Or maybe Sweden will try to put those two together and create a small (by international standards) entity that might survive with state funding and what have you.
So you have this carmaker - Volvo - who has been making cars safer and safer and safer over the last several decades, and JUST as they're sensing the possibility of making the perfectly safe car - in which people will not get killed - the carmaker Volvo unfortunately died. Like the horse.
In my own, little world I have also been witnessing how perfect the databases are getting, how much they can do, how much stuff you can put into them in order to save on the application coding and development side - and how coders, developers and programmers have stopped using them. Just as databases were getting damn near perfect ... people stopped using them.
I have for several years now claimed that any computer technology that reached a state of perfection, a plateau of predictability & stability and a high level of usefulness ... will be replaced with something more chaotic and hence much less productive. I have seen no exceptions.
I now realise it is connected: Technology reaching maturty, car safety reaching its logical conclusion - and feeding of horses.
A man decided to teach his horse not to eat anymore. Gradually he reduced the amount of food the horse got each day, and the programme worked really well.
Unfortunately, just as he had finally taught the horse not to eat at all something unforeseen and tragic happened to the horse and it died suddenly.
I was reminded of the story the other day when I was studying this article in my beloved The Economist (I've subscribed non-stop since 1983):
Stopping in a hurry
Dec 11th 2008
From The Economist print edition
Cars are getting better at avoiding collisions. Before long they may be communicating with each other to make roads safer
.... and somewhere in the article this is stated:"Jan Ivarsson, head of safety at Volvo, believes it should be possible to build a car in which people will not be killed or injured."
On the other hand I can read in various newspapers that Volvo is not doing too well, and may in fact soon be either sold or closed, just like Saab. Or maybe Sweden will try to put those two together and create a small (by international standards) entity that might survive with state funding and what have you.
So you have this carmaker - Volvo - who has been making cars safer and safer and safer over the last several decades, and JUST as they're sensing the possibility of making the perfectly safe car - in which people will not get killed - the carmaker Volvo unfortunately died. Like the horse.
In my own, little world I have also been witnessing how perfect the databases are getting, how much they can do, how much stuff you can put into them in order to save on the application coding and development side - and how coders, developers and programmers have stopped using them. Just as databases were getting damn near perfect ... people stopped using them.
I have for several years now claimed that any computer technology that reached a state of perfection, a plateau of predictability & stability and a high level of usefulness ... will be replaced with something more chaotic and hence much less productive. I have seen no exceptions.
I now realise it is connected: Technology reaching maturty, car safety reaching its logical conclusion - and feeding of horses.