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This question arose from comments about different kinds of progress in computing over the last 50 years or so.

I was asked by some of the other participants to raise it as a question to the whole forum.

Basic idea here is not to bash the current state of things but to try to understand something about the progress of coming up with fundamental new ideas and principles.

I claim that we need really new ideas in most areas of computing, and I would like to know of any important and powerful ones that have been done recently. If we can't really find them, then we should ask "Why?" and "What should we be doing?"

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Jeff Atwood confirmed, that the user "Alan Kay" is THE "Alan Kay". You know, the guy who worked for that copier machine company... ;-) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Kay – splattne Jan 11 at 15:01
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If this gets closed, I may never come back to this site again. – Robert S. Jan 11 at 21:45
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Because I think the co-inventor of Object Oriented Programming deserves his own tag. – Breton Jan 12 at 3:00
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144 votes, 8k views, 93 favorites, a positive mention in the SO podcast, a topic of Jeff's Coding Horror blog, and a driver for a change in functionality of the site. Yeah, this question shouldn't be here! :rolleyes: – Robert S. Feb 4 at 16:18
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@Nick: When you win the turing award and books are written about what you've done or your research, we'll most certainly add your tag. – George Stocker Feb 20 at 1:34
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105 Answers

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Package management and distributed revision control.

These patterns in the way software is developed and distributed are quite recent, and are still just beginning to make an impact.

Ian Murdock has called package management "the single biggest advancement Linux has brought to the industry". Well, he would, but he has a point. The way software is installed has changed significantly since 1980, but most computer users still haven't experienced this change.

Joel and Jeff have been talking about revision control (or version control, or source control) with Eric Sink in Podcast #36. It seems most developers haven't yet caught up with centralized systems, and DVCS is widely seen as mysterious and unnecessary.

From the Podcast 36 transcript:

0:06:37

Atwood: ... If you assume -- and this is a big assumption -- that most developers have kinda sorta mastered fundamental source control -- which I find not to be true, frankly...

Spolsky: No. Most of them, even if they have, it's the check-in, check-out that they understand, but branching and merging -- that confuses the heck out of them.

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hasen j: git is a fantastic DCMS, however there were several others implemented before git - git, is a significant new -implementation- of an idea. – Arafangion Jun 1 at 5:54
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HTM systems (Hiearchical Temporal Memory).

A new approach to Artifical Intelligence, initiated by Jeff Hawkins through the book "On Intelligence".

Now active as a company called Numenta where these ideas are put to the test through development of "true" AI, with an invitation to the community to participate by using the system through SDKs.

It's more about building machine intelligence from the ground up, rather than trying to emulate human reasoning.

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When they do something interesting, I will be the first and loudest leader of the applause – Alan Kay Jan 15 at 2:54
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Effective Parallelization and Quantum Computing - I think these are two areas where progress has been made and much more progress will be made to make very significant changes to our use of computing power.

Effective Parallelization meaning parallelizing and distributing processing without the need for special programming techniques, but where it is built into the compiler/framework.

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The Burroughs B5000 designed in 1961 and deployed in 1962-3 was shipped with multiple CPUs and a higher level language and automatic hardware support to allow this to be done safely – Alan Kay Jan 15 at 2:53
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'Singularity', and all projects like it, i.e. development of operating systems in managed code.

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I think it's fair to say that in 1980, if you were using a computer, you were either getting paid for it or you were a geek... so what's changed?

  • Printers and consumer-level desktop publishing. Meant you didn't need a printing press to make high-volume, high-quality printed material. That was big - of course, nowadays we completely take it for granted, and mostly we don't even bother with the printing part because everyone's online anyway.

  • Colour. Seriously. Colour screens made a huge difference to non-geeks' perception of games & applications. Suddenly games seemed less like hard work and more like watching TV, which opened the doors for Sega, Nintendo, Atari et al to bring consumer gaming into the home.

  • Media compression (MP3s and video files). And a whole bunch of things - like TiVO and iPods - that we don't really think of as computers any more because they're so ubiquitous and so user-friendly. But they are.

The common thread here, I think, is stuff that was once impossible (making printed documents; reproducing colour images accurately; sending messages around the world in real time; distributing audio and video material), and was then expensive because of the equipment and logistics involved, and is now consumer-level. So - what are big corporates doing now that used to be impossible but might be cool if we can work out how to do it small & cheap?

Anything that still involves physical transportation is interesting to look at. Video conferencing hasn't replaced real meetings (yet) - but with the right technology, it still might. Some recreational travel could be eliminated by a full-sensory immersive environment - home cinema is a trivial example; another is the "virtual golf course" in an office building in Soho, where you play 18 holes of real golf on a simulated course.

For me, though, the next really big thing is going to be fabrication. Making things. Spoons and guitars and chairs and clothing and cars and tiles and stuff. Things that still rely on a manufacturing and distribution infrastructure. I don't have to go to a store to buy a movie or an album any more - how long until I don't have to go to the store for clothing and kitchenware?

Sure, there are interesting developments going on with OLED displays and GPS and mobile broadband and IoC containers and scripting and "the cloud" - but it's all still just new-fangled ways of putting pictures on a screen. I can print my own photos and write my own web pages, but I want to be able to fabricate a linen basket that fits exactly into that nook beside my desk, and a mounting bracket for sticking my guitar FX unit to my desk, and something for clipping my cellphone to my bike handlebars.

Not programming related? No... but in 1980, neither was sound production. Or video distribution. Or sending messages to your relatives in Zambia. Think big, people... :)

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Desktop publishing and high quality printing was invented at Xerox PARC in the 70s, some of the Altos back then also had high quality color screens. The Internet predated 1980. Media compression predated 1980. The question is about what fundamental new technologies have been invented since 1980 – Alan Kay Jan 15 at 3:09
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Open Source community development.

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In the sense of open cooperation and development among people who had access to a computer, it's much like the IBM user groups in the 1960s. It's just that more people can afford computers now. – David Thornley Jan 13 at 21:32
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Agree with david, it's only become more prominent now as computers have moved from the education and scientific areas into the business world, this gave rise to "closed source" software, confusing licenses. It was always there, it just didn't need a name until the lawyers got involved. – sascha Jan 15 at 5:11
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Utilization of functional programming/languages within OS core development.

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Free Software Foundation (Established 1985)

Even if you aren't a wholehearted supporter of their philosophy, the ideas that they have been pushing, of free software, open-source has had an amazing influence on the software industry and content in general (e.g. Wikipedia).

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unix itself was born as a collaborative freely distributed project of Bell Labs and collaborators (and subsequently UC Berkeley and other sources with variants and contributions.) It has taken some ugly detours, but it's effectively Open Source now because the cat was out of the bag from birth. – le dorfier Jan 11 at 21:46
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Most database technology was born the same way. In many senses, FSF and its ilk are simply restoring what had previously been provided by educational and corporate basic research facilities. – le dorfier Jan 11 at 21:59
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Agree that FSF has been very influential, but there is a tendency among its advocates to espouse "group think". So many FSF cannot accept that Apple OSX and MS Windows are much better than any open source OS for the average user. No one wants to admit that. – RussellH Jan 12 at 20:32
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The entire purpose of the FSF is to promote software that can be freely used, modified, and redistributed by all. OSX and Windows are not "better" at this by any definition. – Adam Lassek Jan 20 at 14:27
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Janie, you don't have to be a supporter to see that the principles that they are pushing have had a major effect on the industry. I have no interested in getting dragged into a discussion as to whether the FSF is communistic, or whether you should embrace some communist principles. – Oddthinking Jul 24 at 12:54
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One thing that astounds me is the humble spreadsheet. Non-programmer folk build wild and wonderful solutions to real world problems with a simple grid of formula. Replicating their efforts in desktop application often takes 10 to 100 times longer than it took to write the spreadsheet and the resulting application is often harder to use and full of bugs!

I believe the key to the success of the spreadsheet is automatic dependency analysis. If the user of the spreadsheet was forced to use the observer pattern, they'd have no chance of getting it right.

So, the big advance is automatic dependency analysis. Now why hasn't any modern platform (Java, .Net, Web Services) built this into the core of the system? Especially in a day and age of scaling through parallelization - a graph of dependencies leads to parallel recomputation trivially.

Edit: Dang - just checked. VisiCalc was released in 1979 - let's pretend it's a post-1980 invention.

Edit2: Seems that the spreadsheet is already noted by Alan anyway - if the question that bought him to this forum is correct!

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Nope, you are right. Visicalc was pre-1980 – Alan Kay Jan 15 at 2:52
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Adoption of Object Orientation.

The idea was around earlier (e.g. Simula), but it became mainstream in the 1990s. (IMHO, one of its greatest benefits is having providing a common vocabulary amongst developers, so its widespread adoption made it much more valuable.)

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There were several systems that were as "object-oriented" as Simula I, including a file system (early 60s) in USAF, Sketchpad (1962), the B5000 hardware. The stuff that I gave the term "object oriented" to was a somewhat different orientation that was sparked by these earlier systems (and Biology) – Alan Kay Jan 15 at 3:04
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The changes to infrastructure to allow accessible internet from home and office.

Documented and accepted standards from W3C through to APIs

Apart from that most of what we'd think of as new dates back a lot longer than you'd think (e.g. GUI, OOP).

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Outside of hardware innovations, I tend to find that there is little or nothing new under the sun. Most of the really big ideas date back to people like von Neumann and Alan Turing.

A lot of things that are labelled 'technology' these days are really just a program or library somebody wrote, or a retread of an old idea with a new metaphor, acronym, or brand name.

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You can't see the forest since all the trees are in the way... The building blocks are much the same, but the result has changed/evolved. – Johan Mar 14 at 11:16
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...That's the definition of technology ;) "the practical application of knowledge..." – steamer25 Jul 22 at 19:25
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MPI and PVM for parallelization.

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No, concurrent and distributed programming has been considered the "next big thing" since at least the 60s/70s. – BobbyShaftoe Jan 15 at 23:51
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MPI really is some ancient technology. It's awesome that you can write fast parallel code in C but, gag, you shouldn't have to do it at such a low level! (cf. shading languages/CUDA/GPGPU). – Jared Updike Jan 16 at 22:08
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Dependency injection (IOC) and IOC-containers.

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I believe dependency injection to be the worst possible thing invented so far, basically you use dependency injection to obfuscate your code. Maybe I've just seen too many wrong uses of it but that's what is my impression with it so far and that's the reason why I avoid it if possible. – inkredibl Jan 20 at 18:37
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I believe Unit Testing, TDD and Continuous Integration are significant inventions after 1980.

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I'd agree with John, for instance Brooks describes a test-first approach in The Mythical Man-Month (1975). – Fabian Steeg Jan 12 at 10:38
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Continuous integration was first done seriously in BBN Lisp 1.85 in the late 60s, which became Interlisp at PARC. Smalltalk at PARC in the 70s was also a continuous integration system. – Alan Kay Jan 15 at 2:51
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TDD only became generally useful when computers got fast enough to run small tests so quickly that you are willing to run them over & over. – Jay Bazuzi Jan 16 at 18:46
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