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AHEAD OF THE CURVE 

Tom Yager

2007: Something for everyone

From the beauty of OS X Leopard to the brutality of the Intel/AMD rematch


Some Decembers, I look to the coming year and pray that I can earn my keep on the unpredictable visits from my muse that result in a departure from some of my more done-to-death subjects. It’s something of a relief to leave behind 2006, a year in which I spent loads of time yelling into the wind that Intel, despite its best work to date, is farther behind AMD than ever.

In 2007, let’s agree to focus on scalability. Let’s see what happens to power draw and performance when we turn off CPU cores, and black out entire sockets one by one on Intel and AMD multicore systems. Subtraction is revealing. Next year, let’s look at the tangible differences between robust multicore as IBM and AMD implement it, and approximated multicore as Intel does it.

Next year, let’s take a fresh look at long-forgotten PC UNIX, the simple beauty that, but for in-fighting and litigiousness, would have given us a slender, mature, inviolable operating system core. Open source development would have thrived with that foundation. Next year, let’s take a close and frank look at Apple’s OS X Leopard and its Darwin core, which Apple claims will be UNIX-certified on its release. Let’s watch what happens to System V UNIX, a criminally neglected property that belongs in the public’s hands and under responsible stewardship, which means having it taken from SCO.

Open source Java is a greater boon than anyone imagines, not only to open source but to commercial development as well. Freedom to optimize, extend (with deviation from the specification punished by torture) and, to my mind, just plain understand what should be the hottest dynamic language on the planet for both clients and servers will carry Java to new places. By the same token, 2007 will be many developers’ first encounter with Objective-C. I was put off by the Win32-like burdens it placed on developers; miscounted memory, file handles and such resources accounted for much of a Mac application’s debugging and QA effort. I’m hopeful that Objective-C, which, contrary to belief is not an Apple language but a native compiled language in the GNU compiler collection, will find favor on platforms other than the Mac. Its ready rapport with Java balances Java’s dynamic freedom with the speed of native code.

Last, let’s agree to keep little black books of emerging technologies we want to follow. Let’s remember that the greatest opportunities do not lie in the places where the crowds are forming, but in the quieter places no one thinks to look. There are hungry, impoverished, frightened and isolated people who are truly worthwhile investments, and their communities are genuine, ground-floor emerging markets. In these places, interest bearing micro-loans of a few hundred dollars breed sustainable businesses. Technology and connectivity will have an even greater impact with return that’s just as rapid.

Don’t be motivated by pity; it’s corrosive. Instead, close your eyes and know that genius and drive exist in the same proportion among the unfortunate as they do among the fortunate. One teenager blogging from a place the “civilized world” has forgotten can gain a following, get picked up by a magazine and change his life and the lives of all those around him. Create possibilities with an eye toward profiting from them; I forgive you. While we wait like new parents for altruistic motivation to care for others, we waste opportunities where investment serves the needy better than charity.

Tom Yager is chief technologist of the InfoWorld Test Center.

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