Are There Too Many Standards?
CyNRG asks: "Lately, I've been reviewing the different programming and protocol standards in an effort to guide my career in the most fun and profitable direction. The proliferation of standards is astounding! Choosing which path to follow is more like a trip to Las Vegas. Standing at the craps table in Ceasar's Palace at 3:00 am: do I play the point? Big 6 or 8? Play the field? How about covering the hard ways? The world is using technology more and more, so I would expect more standards based on that fact. It seems like common knowledge, vis-a-vis Microsoft, that companies try to put forth 'standards' in an roll of the dice to make their 'standard' defacto. Are there too many standards?"
You should choose either "Pass" or "Don't Pass", bet the maximum odds you can after the point is established and do the same for two "come" or "don't come" bets.
This will give the best odds to walk away a winner (with the house keeping a razor thin edge).
The policy of the United States is worse than bad---it is insane. -- Ludwig von Mises, Economic Policy(1959)
What examples are there of too many _open_ standards causing a problem?
How does a spec become a standard? People recognize the relative benefits of a spec versus the proprietary advantages of doing it their own way. Since standards tend to emerge in discrete verticals, there isn't a dilution of this benefit.
It would not be incorrect to say that a "standard" is really an honorific applied to the spec that won in the marketplace of ideas. If the discrete vertical you chose to be the "standard" in is trivial, then it will be a pyhric victory. If it is non-trivial, even if a better idea comes along, you will have a marked advantage as the "incumbent" standard. (QWERTY vs Dvorak keyboard layouts as an example). Eventually, if enough people see the benefit vs the advantage of the existing standard... new standard.
...But I digress. TREMBLE PUNY HUMANS!ONE DAY MY SPECIES WILL DESTROY YOU ALL!