It's incredibly hard to program a network from scratch for 24 hours.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
It's hard being on a new network, a smaller network.
In the earliest days, this was a project I worked on with great passion because I wanted to solve the Defense Department's problem: it did not want proprietary networking and it didn't want to be confined to a single network technology.
It's difficult for any single company to develop all the applications and services.
The hardest part is developing the idea, and that can take years.
You don't have to be a nerd or a programmer or a network engineer to make a difference.
I don't think that a company should own a studio and the network, and program for their own network. It hurts the creativity - it is not a level playing field.
The big deal about the Internet design was you could have an arbitrary large number of networks so that they would all work together.
It is expensive to start from scratch though.
It's hard work to make a four-minute program look effortless and elegant.
Yeah, computers are going to take over the programming business because they have become so fast recently that they can solve the Halting Problem in five seconds flat.