> However, is our counter-example significant to E? I don't know. If
> corporations become very, very interested in security even for their
> mainline business-to-business applications...
Two comments. The first tantalizing, and I apologize. I've been working with
a group in Seattle to identify a space where things like E and EROS have
unique leverage. Since we're still getting the pieces in place, I won't say
alot about it here, but suffice it to say that there is a trillion dollar a
year space that critically needs this type of technological underpinnings.
More on this, I hope, in the next several weeks.
Second, an observation about those under-appreciated IT programmers. Those
folks work in a space where response time is everything and rough
One thing I'ld like to see somebody look at is providing an application
framework for E that preserves security properties in such a way that
programmers with no time and little in-depth knowledge can build
shap