TunesWiki: Difference between revisions

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(+category:OperatingSystem, and a quote from its FAQ)
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{{Wiki |
{{Wiki <!--see 'Template:Wiki' for full detail and hidden help advice-->
  wiki_logo             = http://www.wikiindex.com/images/e/e6/NoLogo.png
|name            = <s>TunesWiki</s>
| wiki_URL              = http://tunes.org/wiki/
|URL             = https://web.Archive.org/web/20070728104900/http://tunes.org/wiki/Main_Page
| wiki_recentchanges_URL = http://tunes.org/wiki/Special:Recentchanges  
|logo            = https://web.Archive.org/web/20060924071608/http://Tunes.org/wiki/skins/common/images/mediawiki.png
| wiki_wikinode_URL      = No
|recentchanges URL= https://web.Archive.org/web/20060924071608/http://Tunes.org/wiki/Special:Recentchanges
| wiki_status            = Active                   
|wikinode URL    = No<!--https://YourWikiURL.org/wiki/WikiNode, if none, use 'No'-->
| wiki_language         = English                  
|about URL        = https://web.Archive.org/web/20060924072716/http://Tunes.org/wiki/Tunes_FAQ
| wiki_editmode         = LoginToEdit               
|founder         = [[Archive.org:20060924073139/http://Tunes.org/wiki/User:Tcn|Tcn]]
| wiki_engine            = MediaWiki
|status          = Dead
| wiki_maintopic        = Software
|language        = English
}}
|editmode        = OpenEdit
==Description==
|engine          = MediaWiki
The TUNES Project for a Free Reflective Computing System.
|license         = Site retains copyright
(Tunes is a Useful, Nevertheless Expedient System).
|maintopic        = Operating system
|backupurl        = <!--database dump backup file URL; found at '/Special:Statistics' on Wikia & some other MediaWiki sites; archived URL may also be used-->
|backupdate      = 20YY-MM-DD<!--YYYY-MM-DD, ISO 8601 extended date of backup URL; if unknown, dynamic or NO date, DELETE this field-->
}}{{DISPLAYTITLE:<s>TunesWiki</s>}}
{{Size <!--see 'Template:Size' for extensive full detail-->
|pages= <!--plain numeric value for number of CONTENT pages (or Files on a commons wiki); NO thousands separators-->
|statistics URL= No<!--http://Tunes.org/wiki/Special:Statistics--><!--page count source-->
|wikiFactor= 2<!--(wF), preferred; see: Category:wikiFactor; if wF unknown leave void; archived wF value may be used-->
|wikiFactor URL= No<!--http://Tunes.org/wiki/Special:Popularpages--><!--wF source; archived URL if available-->
}}(As of: 2007)<!--YYYY-MM-DD; manually add/amend ISO 8601 date when stats are verified and/or updated-->


TUNES is a project to replace existing Operating Systems, Languages, and User Interfaces by a completely rethought Computing System, based on a fully reflective architecture.


TUNES is politically committed to promote {{tag|libertarian}} ideas in Computing Systems, and technically committed to build a proof-of-concept system around semantically clean reflection.
'''TunesWiki''' was the former wiki site for the TUNES Project.


[[category:OperatingSystem]]
;''What is the TUNES Project?
The TUNES Project is a project to develop a {{tag|free software}} computing system based on a reflective design, which system as a whole is also to be named 'TUNES'.
 
We want to get rid of the obsolete or plain mis-designed idiosyncrasies of current computing systems that standardize things from the low-level on, as the legacy of systems designed first for resource-poor {{tag|computers}}, then under the constraints of proprietary software.
 
For instance, we want to replace filesystems with orthogonal persistence of objects, compilation and administration of program binaries with automatic consistency management of dynamically optimized code, user-interface-driven programming with structure-driven user-interfacing, explicit manual networking with implicit automatic distribution.  See #Features if you like feature lists.
 
The common point about these features is that they consist not in something more that the user/programmer can do with some more work (implementing such 'do' features is a 'simple matter of programming', and requires no a priori system support besides the basic device drivers); they consist in the user/programmer being able not to do, about his not having to care, yet still achieve all that he does care about; they consist in relieving the human from work by letting the machine handle it for him, which is the essence of progress.
 
The ability to let the machine automatically do things that could previously be done only by manual interaction (which include typing programs), the ability to specify what one cares about and what doesn't care about and trusts the computer to handle all by itself, these are what the reflective design is all about.
 
;''What does the name 'TUNES' stand for?
The name 'TUNES' is a recursive acronym, which stands for 'TUNES is a Useful, Nevertheless Expedient, System'.  The name demonstrates our commitment to build a computing system according to long-term concerns about how computing should be, as well as practical requirements and opportunities of today's computing.
 
Actually, the 'N' used to stand for 'Not', meaning that we conspicuously do not strive toward expediency in the restricted meaning of 'being good in the short term with overwhelming bad side-effects in the long run'.  It was transformed into 'Nevertheless', to insist on the fact that despite our being attached to long-term implications of our system, we are conscious that to live and survive, we must be strong on short term issues, so that we aim not only long-term utility, but also short-term expediency, in its extended meaning that does not preclude said long-term utility.
 
[[Category:Founded in 2005]]<!--https://web.Archive.org/web/20060924072644/http://Tunes.org/wiki/index.php?title=Main_Page&action=history-->

Latest revision as of 16:48, 9 November 2022

https://web.Archive.org/web/20060924071608/http://Tunes.org/wiki/skins/common/images/mediawiki.png TunesWiki
Recent changes
[No WikiNode]
About
[No Mobile URL]
Founded by: Tcn
Status: Dead
Language: English
Edit mode: OpenEdit
Wiki engine: MediaWiki
Wiki license: Site retains copyright
Main topic: Operating system
Wiki size: unknown size [No see stats]
wikiFactor: 2 info / [No verify]

(As of: 2007)


TunesWiki was the former wiki site for the TUNES Project.

What is the TUNES Project?

The TUNES Project is a project to develop a free software computing system based on a reflective design, which system as a whole is also to be named 'TUNES'.

We want to get rid of the obsolete or plain mis-designed idiosyncrasies of current computing systems that standardize things from the low-level on, as the legacy of systems designed first for resource-poor computers, then under the constraints of proprietary software.

For instance, we want to replace filesystems with orthogonal persistence of objects, compilation and administration of program binaries with automatic consistency management of dynamically optimized code, user-interface-driven programming with structure-driven user-interfacing, explicit manual networking with implicit automatic distribution. See #Features if you like feature lists.

The common point about these features is that they consist not in something more that the user/programmer can do with some more work (implementing such 'do' features is a 'simple matter of programming', and requires no a priori system support besides the basic device drivers); they consist in the user/programmer being able not to do, about his not having to care, yet still achieve all that he does care about; they consist in relieving the human from work by letting the machine handle it for him, which is the essence of progress.

The ability to let the machine automatically do things that could previously be done only by manual interaction (which include typing programs), the ability to specify what one cares about and what doesn't care about and trusts the computer to handle all by itself, these are what the reflective design is all about.

What does the name 'TUNES' stand for?

The name 'TUNES' is a recursive acronym, which stands for 'TUNES is a Useful, Nevertheless Expedient, System'. The name demonstrates our commitment to build a computing system according to long-term concerns about how computing should be, as well as practical requirements and opportunities of today's computing.

Actually, the 'N' used to stand for 'Not', meaning that we conspicuously do not strive toward expediency in the restricted meaning of 'being good in the short term with overwhelming bad side-effects in the long run'. It was transformed into 'Nevertheless', to insist on the fact that despite our being attached to long-term implications of our system, we are conscious that to live and survive, we must be strong on short term issues, so that we aim not only long-term utility, but also short-term expediency, in its extended meaning that does not preclude said long-term utility.