Home > Uncategorized > The 520’th post

The 520’th post

This is the 520’th post on this blog, which will be 10-years old tomorrow. Regular readers may have noticed an increase in the rate of posting over the last few months; at the start of this month I needed to write 10 posts to hit my one-post a week target (which has depleted the list of things I keep meaning to write about).

What has happened in the last 10-years?

I probably missed several major events hiding in plain sight, either because I am too close to them or blinkered.

What did not happen in the last 10 years?

  • No major new languages. These require major new hardware ecosystems; in the smartphone market Android used Java and iOS made use of existing languages. There were the usual selection of fashion/vanity driven wannabes, e.g., Julia, Rust, and Go. The R language started to get noticed, but it has been around since 1995, and Python looks set to eventually kill it off,
  • no accident killing 100+ people has been attributed to faults in software. Until this happens, software engineering has a dead bodies problem,
  • the creation of new software did not slow down from its break-neck speed,
  • in the first few years of this blog I used to make yearly predictions, which did not happen (most of the time).

Now I can relax for 9.5 years, before scurrying to complete 1,040 posts, i.e., the rate of posting will now resume its previous, more sedate, pace.

  1. Greg A. Woods
    December 1, 2018 23:01 | #1

    Regarding 100+ software fault induced deaths….

    There have been a couple of significant airplane crashes that are arguably due entirely to software faults, though I can’t quickly find references to the two I was remembering: one where an aircraft flew into the side of a hill because the pilots couldn’t force the engines to throttle up; and another where an error in programming the destination airport caused the plane to “land” in a field.

    I also found mention of one that I don’t remember hearing about where malware apparently prevented software from sounding an alarm about some kind of hardware failure, though that’s been disputed.

  2. December 2, 2018 14:53 | #2

    @Greg A. Woods
    One of the few works that enumerates software related deaths is Computer bugs in hospitals: A new killer by Thomas and Thimbleby. Mistakes in software are starting to kill people, but the rate is still very low, compared to all the other things that can kill you.

  1. No trackbacks yet.