The Observation Deck
 

The Observation Deck

Views on software from Bryan Cantrill's deck chair

20071218 Tuesday December 18, 2007

 Announcing dtrace.conf

We on Team DTrace have realized that with so much going on in the world of DTrace -- ports to new systems, providers for new languages and development of new DTrace-based tools -- the time is long overdue for a DTrace summit of sorts. So I'm very pleased to announce our first-ever DTrace (un)conference: dtrace.conf(08), to be held in San Francisco on March 14, 2008. One of the most gratifying aspects of DTrace is its community: because DTrace operates both across abstraction boundaries and to great depth, it naturally attracts technologists who do the same -- systems generalists who couple an ability to think abstractly about the system with a thirst for the concrete data necessary to better understand it. So if nothing else, dtrace.conf should provide for thought-provoking and wide-ranging conversation!

The conference wiki has more details; hope to see you at dtrace.conf in San Francisco in March!

(2007-12-18 10:39:22.0/2007-12-18 10:39:22.0) Permalink Comments [4]

20071205 Wednesday December 05, 2007

 Boom/bust cycles

Growing up, I was sensitive to the boom/bust cycles endemic in particular industries: my grandfather was a petroleum engineer, and he saw the largest project of his career cancelled during the oil bust in the mid-1980s.[1] And growing up in Colorado, I saw not only the destruction wrought by the oil bust (1987 was very bleak in Denver), but also the long boom/bust history in the mining industries -- unavoidable in towns like Leadville. (Indeed, it was only after going to the East Coast for university that I came to appreciate that school children in the rest of the country don't learn about the Silver Panic of 1893 in such graphic detail.)

So when, in the early 1990s, I realized that my life's calling was in software, I felt a sense of relief: here was an industry that was at last not shackled to the fickle Earth -- an industry that was surely "bust-proof" at some level. Ha! As I learned (painfully, like most everyone else) in the Dot-Com boom and subsequent bust, booms and busts are -- if anything -- even more endemic in our industry. Companies grow from nothing to spectacular heights in virtually no time at all -- and can crash back into nothingness just as quickly.

I bring up all of this, because if you haven't seen it, this video is absolutely brilliant, capturing these endemic cycles perfectly (and hilariously), and imparting a surprising amount of wisdom besides.

I'll still take our boom and bust cycles over those in other industries: there are, after all, still not quite yet software "ghost towns" -- however close the old Excite@Home building on the 101 was getting before it was finally leased!


[1] If anyone is looking for an unspeakably large quantity of technical documentation on the (cancelled) ARAMCO al-Qasim refinery project, I have it waiting for your perusal!

(2007-12-18 10:13:20.0/2007-12-05 07:44:31.0) Permalink Comments [2]


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