• ProdigalFrog
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    392 days ago

    MIDI.

    Before the 80’s, there was no standard interface to control electronic instruments, just a bunch of proprietary interfaces unique to each manufacterer. But in 1983, amazingly they actually standardized on MIDI, and it remains a useful standard to this day, with any new versions of MIDI being completely backwards compatible, so your Yamaha DX7 from the 80’s is still just as viable to use today as the day it was new!

    • @[email protected]
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      52 days ago

      DMX is a similar protocol for lighting.
      Sure, there’s artnet and sacn, but most gigs still use good old DMX.

    • 🐍🩶🐢
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      32 days ago

      This really is a perfect example. I did a lot of MIDI things as a kid!

    • @[email protected]
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      12 days ago

      Should mention Open Sound Control which is also pretty good. Not exactly a competitor, it was supposed to provide a richer, real time interface. Still popular for certain use cases, including beyond music.

    • @DreamlandLividity
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      12 days ago

      Probably because utf-8 vs utf-16 vs utf-32 makes people feel like it is still annoying multi-standard.

  • @[email protected]
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    3 days ago

    1000006617

    There are many, I think. Like what other people have mentioned, sometimes the new standard is just better on all metrics.

    Another common example is when someone creates something as a passion project, rather than expecting it to get used widely. It’s especially frustrating for me when I see people denigrate projects like those, criticizing it for a lack of practicality…

    • @[email protected]
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      73 days ago

      The competing standards problem is mostly a problem of not actually talking to stakeholders. Most of these “universal standards” don’t cover some rare, specific, but very important, use cases.

  • AbsentBird
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    263 days ago

    Light bulb sockets are the same all over. RJ-45 Ethernet, USB-C, Bluetooth, WiFi, TCP, HTTP, HTML, CSS.

    • @[email protected]
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      82 days ago

      While light bulb sockets don’t change much from region to region, they definitely aren’t all the same. For the bulbs (not the bars), there’s two large categories: Edison screws and bi-pin. Edison screws also come in a lot of sizes. When compact fluorescents were rolling out, they got a new bi-pin connector from the USA: GU24. My whole home has GU24 fixtures (not by my own choice), but my lamps are Edison screws.

      • Sol 6 VI StatCmd
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        22 days ago

        Thank you for teaching me how to replace my porch light (ONLY MY PORCH LIGHT?!?!) that’s been out for over a year. I tried to pull the bulb out and it shattered in my hands. I was like WTF is this shit? Haven’t touched it since.

      • AbsentBird
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        32 days ago

        GU24 is wack, especially for home lighting. I think they aren’t made much anymore.

        • NeatoBuilds
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          12 days ago

          It was a pain to find gu24, I had to order them online for two rooms

    • Flying Squid
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      32 days ago

      USB-C

      Gonna have to disagree with you there. Try using a USB-C data cable to charge a device. Now try figuring out which cable out of five is the charge cable.

      • AbsentBird
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        42 days ago

        Those aren’t different standards, they’re just different USB-C cables. It’s like saying light bulb sockets aren’t a unifying standard because there’s different bulbs with different wattages. The fact that all those cables work over the same standard is an example of how ubiquitous the standard is. That said they should be labeled better, like how USB3 was color coded blue; each cable could have a color strip to distinguish it.

        • Flying Squid
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          12 days ago

          Shouldn’t being able to identify which cable is used for which application be part of a standard?

          You brought up light bulbs- imagine if they didn’t tell you the wattage? But they do. They print it right on the bulb.

          • AbsentBird
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            12 days ago

            I agree with you, but I don’t think that makes it a poor example; those different cables aren’t competing standards, they’re different types of USB-C cables. They should absolutely label the cables though, big oversight on the standard there.

    • Kairos
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      33 days ago

      It seems a lot of sites these days are actively hostile towards the HTML-CSS combo.

        • Kairos
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          12 days ago

          Not really. I guess Google search requires JavaScript now.

      • AbsentBird
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        32 days ago

        Just use React or something, you can use a single syntax for all three. It makes total sense why the syntax is different if you think about when and why they were made. We had HTML for years before CSS, and it was longer still until we got JavaScript. Each language has a different purpose, so naturally a different syntax makes sense. Your hill is poorly defended.

        • @[email protected]
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          02 days ago

          In that case on general programming language should have taken over instead of trying to merge all three. Especially CSS, which in its infinite intelligence decided to use the minus operator instead of underscore, is completely out of place. Everything is jank and you can tell it has been patched together with duct tape.

          • AbsentBird
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            12 days ago

            Idk, I like CSS, but I come from a web development background. Modern JS (ES4+) is fully capable of replacing CSS using the style property.

            JSX is sort of like a singular language to do all three.

            HTML isn’t perfect, but I can’t think of a better language for writing documents. TEX is unintuitive, PDF is opaque, markdown is just HTML shorthand.

  • @mlg
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    353 days ago

    Whenever the new standard hits the almost impossible golden triangle of “cheap, reliable, and fast”.

    It’s gotta be cheaper than the alternatives, better and more reliable than the alternatives, and faster/easier to adopt than the alternatives.

    Early computers for example had various ways to chug math, such as mechanical setups, relays, vacuum tube’s, etc.

    When Bell invented their MOSFET transistor and figured out how to scale production, all those previous methods became obsolete for computers because transistors were now cheaper, more reliable, and faster to adopt than their predecessors.

    Tbf though transistors are more of a hardware thing. A better example of a standard would be RIP being superceded by BGP on the internet.

    • KillingTimeItself
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      83 days ago

      Tbf though transistors are more of a hardware thing. A better example of a standard would be RIP being superceded by BGP on the internet.

      another big example is the telecom companies being superseded by IP based networking, rather than whatever patch routing bullshit was previously cooked up.

      Sometimes certain solutions are just, better.

  • @[email protected]
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    623 days ago

    Toilet paper rolls.

    Somehow we settled on a pretty good size for toilet rolls, and there never seems to be a compatibility issue with holders.

    At least not for households. Commercial products have their own things going on, but it doesn’t affect most people.

    Is there a formal standard, or did we decide not to mess with good enough?

    • @Machinist
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      293 days ago

      We’ve got a 100 year old toilet roll holder, the spindle was turned on a lathe and the wooden cutout it sits in was hand carved. It is a poor fit for modern high sheet count rolls. We can’t stand to get rid of it so we just leave the roll outside of it until it is small enough to fit.

      • @lemming741
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        83 days ago

        I have a half-bath with a modern holder. When that roll is 75% consumed, I move it to the bathrooms with the older style.

        • @Machinist
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          43 days ago

          I actually have a wood lathe and all the other tooling to make one, not that I would.

          I’ve been fixing the place up since August. It’s a farm that hasn’t been properly maintained in about 20 years.

          I’m doing my best to build to the standard of the original owner and his son with modern materials and methods. It’s a humbling experience. Nothing is quite square but everything is built like it’s bomb proof. You couldn’t afford to build out of solid wood like they did. The joints and meets are also super tight, you can’t get a sheet of paper between roof boards on the barn in most places.

        • @Machinist
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          23 days ago

          That sounds like a lot of fiddly work. Just sit a new roll on the back of the tank and use it until it fits.

        • @Machinist
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          33 days ago

          Correct, width is the same. It can’t handle the diameter of modern jumbo rolls.

          • @AA5B
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            33 days ago

            You could always buy smaller rolls. Someone must, since they still exist

            • @Machinist
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              23 days ago

              My girl makes that decision and wants to keep the holder as well.

    • OtterOP
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      83 days ago

      This is a cool one I haven’t thought of before!

  • @Euro
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    4 days ago

    Email, as far as im aware there isn’t some alternative email standard (messaging services, whatsapp, signal, sms, etc do not count imo as I believe they serve a different purpose than email)

    DNS, while there are alternative root servers, they still fundamentally rely on the dns protocol.

    TCP/IP, when the internet was first starting, this was not the only standard in use, but now it is (to my knowledge).

    I thought about this for longer than I should’ve for a comment on a random post, but this is all I could think of lol.

    edit: grammar

    • @[email protected]
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      304 days ago

      TCP/IP isnt the only standard in use even today. UDP/IP is the other big one and there’s a few smaller protocols hanging around like utp.

  • @[email protected]
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    3 days ago

    You can avoid the issue when a government just mandates one standard, ideally after consulting with experts on which is the best.
    See: USB, SCART, etc.

    • @renzev
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      193 days ago

      A lot of people seem to be opposed to this argument, seeing it as a kind of government overreach, but I think it can work if done correctly. Things like USB and HDMI are already governed by collectives of companies, I think having the government work together with them can be beneficial for both consumers and producers alike.

    • @[email protected]
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      -83 days ago

      USB-C is a total failure though. Switching voltages, extremely high currents, expensive cables, fickle connectors, …

      • KillingTimeItself
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        33 days ago

        non standard conforming cables, and connectors, plus the entire mess of it supporting anything from power only, to usb 2, to usb 3, to thunderbolt 3, to thunderbolt 4? and usb 4.0 now.

        It’s an utter fucking disaster of a shithole.

  • @GamingChairModel
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    243 days ago

    Networking standards started picking winners during the PC revolution of the 80’s and 90’s. Ethernet, with the first standards announced in 1983, ended up beating out pretty much other LAN standard at the physical layer (physical plugs, voltages and other ways of indicating signals) and the data link layer (the structure of a MAC address or an Ethernet frame). And this series of standards been improved many times over, with meta standards about how to deal with so many generations of standards through autonegotiation and backwards compatibility.

    We generally expect Ethernet to just work, at the highest speeds the hardware is capable of supporting.

    • KillingTimeItself
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      53 days ago

      networking standards were a mess before ethernet really fucking cooked with twisted pair wiring.

      Ethernet had already existed for a little bit prior to this, and most other alternatives were actively being worked on at the time, and relatively similar to ethernet, save for the general technical implementation, token ring as opposed to the funny broadcast meta. But when ethernet was able to just barely get ahead and use twisted pair, the entire thing came crumbling down and everyone agreed that ethernet over twisted pair, with switched star topology was the best.

        • KillingTimeItself
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          114 hours ago

          three primary things.

          Fucking coax, literally the bane of anybody anywhere, fucking horrible standard. Works well, which is the only reason anybody uses it, it’s just a nightmare. (if you have ever dealt with a coax cable, you know exactly what i mean)

          Offices were already wired up with phone lines, which often had redundant lines running to each endpoint, meaning you could just hook straight into the existing wiring infrastructure, and convert it to ethernet (very accessible and cheap)

          twisted pair comes with the advantage of noise reduction over longer distances, cheaper construction, and significantly simpler wire structure, making it easier to route, manage, terminate, and just generally exist around. (basically the same as the first one lmao)

          It was actually so much of a problem, that the original ethernet standard, based on RG-6? I think, don’t quote me on it, ended up moving to a smaller coax standard and was referred to as “thinnet” as it was thinner coax and easier to work with.

    • @ch00f
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      654 days ago

      Yeah just don’t pay too close attention to the unofficial power delivery protocols.

    • @[email protected]
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      354 days ago

      My main complaint about USB is the cables. There’s no way of knowing what standards and data speeds the cable may support.

      • @cynar
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        3 days ago

        They’ve now, at least, released a standard set of markings. Basically, the data speed in Gb and the power capacity in Watts will be printed on the connector. Whether chinese suppliers will bother complying is another matter.

        • @[email protected]
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          33 days ago

          Your typo makes your comment really confusing because it means the opposite of what you meant to write.

          • @cynar
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            23 days ago

            Edited to fix. 👍

  • @moakley
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    Not exactly this, but it reminds me of my first job. I used to work in finance, and I was given the task of automating cash flow reports that were sent out to hundreds of clients.

    The problem was that they were made manually in Excel, and most of them were unique. So every couple years they’d get a bunch of smart people in a conference room, and tell them to figure out how to automate the cash flows. The first step was always to create a standard cash flow template, and convince everyone to adopt it.

    Some users would adopt the new template, but most of them would say that the client didn’t like it, so they’d stop using it and the project would fall apart.

    By the time I got there, there were still hundreds of unique cash flows, but then there were a few dozen that shared the same handful of templates, like a graveyard of failed attempts to automate this process.

    I just made the output customizable. The reports looked the same as what the client was used to, but it saved hundreds of man hours for the users. A lot of people got laid off.

  • @Zarxrax
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    504 days ago

    The way I see it, it’s not so much an issue of making something that’s better than the other standards. It’s really about getting your standard into actual use and hitting critical mass which makes all the other standards irrelevant.

    • @perviouslyiner
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      4 days ago

      see also: NACS (yep that’s a Tesla plug in a standards agreement)

    • @Donkter
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      34 days ago

      Yeah. No standard covers all use cases. It’s just best to have one standard that makes a lot of compromises.

  • @DomeGuy
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    504 days ago

    When the standard is a big interoperability push that leverages MORE functionality as a bribe to be implemented.

    This is how USB (plug & play!), Bluetooth (wireless headset!), HDMI (high def, single cable!) , and USB-C (both sides are good!) all beat the entrenched pseudo standards.