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  • From: Jim Melton <jim.melton@o...>
  • To: Michael Kay <mike@s...>
  • Date: Sun, 04 Dec 2011 18:17:05 -0700

An example of those zillions of things that many people unknowingly 
witness many times a year is...gasoline pumps!  Increasingly, 
gasoline pumps use XML to communicate to the registers in the office, 
to deal with the credit card authorization automatically, etc.

Jim

At 12/4/2011 05:43 AM, Michael Kay wrote:
> >I'll take a wild guess and say that 99% of all XML documents are 
> exclusively processed by machines. Is that a reasonable estimate?
>
>Seems a gross underestimate to me. I'd say 99.99999%. There are 
>zillions of things flying around the ether in XML form, like status 
>reports from networking routers, that are never seen by any human being.
>
> >That's not at all my experience.
>
>With respect, you're a human, so you see a biased sample. The 
>experience of a machine might be different.
>
>Michael Kay
>Saxonica

========================================================================
Jim Melton --- Editor of ISO/IEC 9075-* (SQL)     Phone: +1.801.942.0144
   Chair, ISO/IEC JTC1/SC32 and W3C XML Query WG    Fax : +1.801.942.3345
Oracle Corporation        Oracle Email: jim dot melton at oracle dot com
1930 Viscounti Drive      Alternate email: jim dot melton at acm dot org
Sandy, UT 84093-1063 USA  Personal email: SheltieJim at xmission dot com
========================================================================
=  Facts are facts.   But any opinions expressed are the opinions      =
=  only of myself and may or may not reflect the opinions of anybody   =
=  else with whom I may or may not have discussed the issues at hand.  =
========================================================================  



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