Re: Dreaming About Redesigning SQL

From: Bob Badour <bbadour_at_golden.net>
Date: Sun, 26 Oct 2003 21:58:23 -0500
Message-ID: <k62dneNXAaWCFwGiU-KYgw_at_golden.net>


"Christopher Browne" <cbbrowne_at_acm.org> wrote in message news:bni0s0$10g8ah$1_at_ID-125932.news.uni-berlin.de...
> "Anthony W. Youngman" <thewolery_at_nospam.demon.co.uk> wrote:
> > In article <mhMlb.2417$9E1.18525_at_attbi_s52>, Marshall Spight
> > <mspight_at_dnai.com> writes
> >>Unless one has data independence, one does not have
> >>this option; one will be locked into a particular
> >>performance model. This is why I found the MV
> >>guy's obvious pleasure at being able to precisely
> >>describe the performance model for his DB as odd:
> >>I thought it a deficit to be able to say what it was;
> >>he thought it an asset.
> >>
> > When you park your car, do you put the chassis on the drive, the
> > engine in the garage, and the wheels in the front garden?
>
> When I park my car, I don't particularly _care_ whether it runs on
> propane, diesel, gasoline, ethanol, or batteries.

Christopher,

You have to remember who you are talking to; Wol is ignorant and stupid. A car is a physical artifact just as the physical representation of a datum is a physical artifact. Physical independence is the equivalent to having a door from the hallway to the garage, a door from the kitchen to the garage, a door from the back yard to the garage, and car access to the driveway--and an identical car parked in the back alley just for convenience.

Wol's analogies are dumb because they reflect his intelligence. Received on Mon Oct 27 2003 - 03:58:23 CET

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