this post was submitted on 27 Jun 2023
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What? This article is all over the place and makes no sense. I really don't understand what they think the word fad means - but from what I know (within the context that can be applied to SQL) is that it is something that people are enthusiastic about for a short period of time.
Where as they seem to pull out this quote:
This is so wrong. Blockchains are far more than just some chcecksums. And arguably far more of a fad than SQL is as they have been around for a lot less time and have fallen out of favour by a lot of people. Though I would still not argue they are a fad.
Again, a while over simplification that misses the whole point of the subject. Then goes on to mention that
And boils that down to:
Because, yes... ML is basically just all
grep | sort
... /sSo as far as I understand what argument they are trying to make - is that if a tool is basically a unix command it is not a fad? Which is not what the word means at all.
Yeah, I can see that. But I question the timescale they have in mind. Will it still be around in another 50 years? Probably. 100? Who knows. I would hope we have better tools by then.
We already do see this. There are many new database technologies out there, from graph databases to object databases. But none have managed to displace relational databases or SQL. They are all just different tools we have available suitable for different situations.
SQL is not a fad. And the article fails to argue otherwise, if they even understand what that word means.
I'm pretty sure this article is a really bad attempt at satire. Or if there is a point, maybe it's that... the fact that there have been things in the past that are not just fads (like SQL), that means that current things that are fads (like blockchain) are in fact not just fads?
I feel like this might have been written by ChatGPT and some intern quickly organized the results into sections and called it an article.
It honestly crossed my mind - but I am not sure even ChatGPT would miss understand what a fad was so badly.
Wouldn't surprise me.
Naw man, there's some sed and awk in there too!
I don't know... if joins are so good, why did it take so long for them to show up via SQL? /s