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Watching David Spivak's course (see my twitter thread) which led me to this book, I came to wonder very quickly if Poly as Dynamical Systems could not be the mathematics for Actor based systems. That is an important question to me as I am using Actors to program a web server, and so understanding the relation would give me extra energy to read the books, and correct typos :-) If it did fit it could perhaps provide the maths for a general theory of the web.
The inventor of Actor Systems was Carl Hewitt and he wrote up a very personal explanation of them in a 2010 paper where he writes that it integrates:
1.the lambda calculus
2. interrupts
3. blocking method invocation
4. imperative programming using locks
5. capability systems
6 co-routines
7. packet networks
8. email systems
9. Petri nets
10. Smalltalk-72
11. Simula-67
12. pattern-directed invocation (from Planner)
I first came across an actor system using a language April by Keith Clark in 1993 doing my Masters, that could send messages to actors on the internet around the world as tuples. I am now using a different actor system - Akka - to build a Web Server used by many internet behemoths such as Paypal, that use it to execute over 1 billion transactions a day on relatively little hardware.
Akka Actors
form open systems,
maintain state
have names (URLs) that can be used to address them
can be typed by the messages they receive,
they can change their own behavior
the whole point is that they are individual execution contexts
Watching David Spivak's course (see my twitter thread) which led me to this book, I came to wonder very quickly if Poly as Dynamical Systems could not be the mathematics for Actor based systems. That is an important question to me as I am using Actors to program a web server, and so understanding the relation would give me extra energy to read the books, and correct typos :-) If it did fit it could perhaps provide the maths for a general theory of the web.
The inventor of Actor Systems was Carl Hewitt and he wrote up a very personal explanation of them in a 2010 paper where he writes that it integrates:
I first came across an actor system using a language April by Keith Clark in 1993 doing my Masters, that could send messages to actors on the internet around the world as tuples. I am now using a different actor system - Akka - to build a Web Server used by many internet behemoths such as Paypal, that use it to execute over 1 billion transactions a day on relatively little hardware.
Akka Actors
Actor systems are excellent tools to build streaming libraries, which can be composed then using symmetric monoidal category like diagrams.
@alcestes has been working on pushing typesafe actors to the next level and I think he has a very good understanding of the theory of actors. I am not sure how much category theory he knows though.
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