24 August 2009

What event model ontology?

Hmm, it seems that no one has blogged, tweeted or mentioned my blog post in my last plea, which I'm quite disappointed with. However, I'll chalk this one down to the complexity of what I'm trying to accomplish, and my failed attempt at explaining what it is.

In the mean time I've been working at it, converging various models from all sorts of weird places (anything from WebServices and SOAP stacks, to operating systems like Linux, to event models in Java and .Net, to more conceptual stuff in the Semantic Web world), but boy, you can tell that we live in a world shaped by iterative imperative paradigms of approaching the software world.

One thing I learned quite early was declarative and functional programming, introduced to me, of all places, with using XSLT many years ago. It may not be the most obvious place to find it, and this is one of those hidden gems of the language which still doesn't enjoy too much of a following. And no wonder; people come into it from the imperative stuff that dominates the world, polluting us all with filthy thoughts of changing variables (at least in Scala you can choose between var and val), functions that aren't truly functional, and the classical idea in object-oriented programming of a taxonomical structure that doesn't hold up to scrutiny.

Let me clarify that last point. Wht are we doing this stuff? Why are we creating computer programs?

To solve problems. And who are we solving problems for? For humans. It's the classical example (albeit extrapolated) of garbage in, garbage out. I've talked about this in the past a lot, about the constant translation that happens between huna and machine, and how we are creating translation models in both worlds in order to "move forward" and solve problems better. But this excercise becomes increasingly harder as our legacy grows, so trying to teach functional programming to people who don't understand certain basic principles of Lambda Calculus is going to be hard, just like it's hard to teach Topic Maps to people who live in a SQL world. Or like it's hard to teach auto-generating user-interfaces to a user-interface developer.

These are usually called paradigm shifts, where some important part of your existing world is totally changed as you learn some other even more important knowledge. You must shift your thinking from one way to a rather different other. And this is hard. Patterns of knowledge in your brain is maintained by traversing certain paths often, and as such strengthening that path (following the pattern that an often travelled path must be the right path). But if the path is wrong, there's some pretty strong paths you need to unlearn. Damn, that is hard! Which is why I urge you to try it out.

I'm currently using Topic Maps, human behaviour driven ontologies for auto-generating applications and user-interfaces over functional complete models of both virtual and concrete human domains, all with temporality and continous change as the central paradigms. Yeah, pretty hefty stuff, and I've spent years trying to unlearn stuff I learnt in the years before that. And those years were unlearning some other stuff before that. My whole life has been one huge unlearning experience, and I don't think any other way conceptually grasps the beauty of life better; nature and life both are in perpetual change. Needless to say, I'm enjoying every single crazy second of it!

But back to my event model ontology. I've learned one important thing in all this; Sowa has suggested a shift from logical inference to analogy, and this coupled with the OODA loop can create an intriguing platform for knowledge management and eco-system forsoftware applications. I'll let you know more as things progress from here. I'm excited!

And as always, I'd love to hear your comments on all of this. I beg you. Again. :)

14 August 2009

Emotional thunderstorm from the Ukraine

I have to share this one with you. My grandfather, Hans Adolph Johannesen, fought during WWII as part of the Norwegian underground resistance to the German invasion, was captured and put in prison for many years (1 year at Grini, Norway, and 2.5 years in Germany, till the end of the war, with and befriended former prime minister of Norway Trygve Brattli). All of this many years before I was even born. But he shared the stories and the pain and the heroism. I recorded it, I interviewed him, I lived with him. And then he died, almost 10 years ago.

And right now all those emotions came washing over me, a thunderstorm, pouring rain, because I was silly enough to watch this amazing - in the true sense of the word! - artist retelling of such pain and memories, and in the least likely of all places ;
Ukrainian sand artist proves that reality TV's got talent: "James Donaghy: Kseniya Simonova, the winner of Ukraine's got talent, has become a YouTube phenomenon by telling stories through sand animation. Who needs Susan Boyle?"

5 August 2009

Can I ask you a favour? (Does social media actually work?)

Hi everybody. Could I ask you a favour? I'm not getting much response to my quest for a unified software architecture ontology, so could I humbly ask you to blog, tag, link or otherwise gossip about my previous post on the matter? I would really appreciate it, and I promise I'll share my findings with you all.

(My subtitle "Does social media actually work?" is a blatant attempt to get circulation going by mocking the whole debacle which I try to, ahem, you know, promote. Thanks.)