When you close down a program that is using up too much memory or processing power (google chrome I’m looking at you) you are making an allocation decision (there are lots of others allocations I could point at, if you look at it from that point of view).
So I would argue that they do, they just do it after the fact and in a very disruptive way.
Running a program is making an allocation decision of sorts too, again not fine grained or very controlled but still there.
If this is contrasted to brains, there is no central authority that picks and chooses what the system is doing. So things don’t have to be the way they are.
And IoT botnets are not a consequence of human management scaling badly, they are a consequence of an unfortunate set of incentives for IoT manufacturers.
If management of compute was easy and cheap (as cheap as compute has become), then you wouldn’t have to rely on the incentives of manufacturers.
When you close down a program that is using up too much memory or processing power (google chrome I’m looking at you) you are making an allocation decision (there are lots of others allocations I could point at, if you look at it from that point of view).
So I would argue that they do, they just do it after the fact and in a very disruptive way.
Running a program is making an allocation decision of sorts too, again not fine grained or very controlled but still there.
If this is contrasted to brains, there is no central authority that picks and chooses what the system is doing. So things don’t have to be the way they are.
If management of compute was easy and cheap (as cheap as compute has become), then you wouldn’t have to rely on the incentives of manufacturers.