XPost: rec.arts.sf.written, rec.arts.sf.science   
   From: jclarkeusenet@cox.net   
      
   In article , bap@shrdlu.com says...   
   >   
   > On 19/01/14 18:34, Doc O'Leary wrote:   
   >   
   >   
   > > My main question is why such a delivery service always seems limited to   
   > > one industry (e.g., lunch boxes). I mean, it should be pretty easy (I   
   > > did it for my network) to abstract the need to just move *things* in   
   > > boxes. It makes no sense to me, for example, that FedEx and mail and   
   > > pizzas and newspapers (and on and on) all use completely isolated local   
   > > delivery networks. At the same time, I can't buy groceries from my   
   > > local co-op because they don't do deliveries at all, even though they're   
   > > right next to the pizza shop that does!   
   >   
   > The roots of my 'pod' system lies in an idea I had about 40 years ago   
   > when I first studied object-oriented programming languages. I noted at   
   > the time that the essence of shopping for something was to send a   
   > message to an object persuading it to change its ownership and location.   
   > I think we are now at the point where we could implement that.   
      
   And in 40 years you haven't given one minute's thought to the problems   
   with your proposal, have you?   
      
      
   > It fits quite neatly into a possible future version of the HTTP protocol   
   > used for web pages although HTTP didn't exist at that time. The other   
   > thing I though of at that time (and wrote about in a letter to Byte) was   
   > an encoding scheme for non-latin characters.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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