From ... From: Erik Naggum Subject: Re: Will Java kill Lisp? Date: 1997/09/07 Message-ID: <3082621719603636@naggum.no>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 270458605 References: <5tsgo6$rlq$1@nz12.rz.uni-karlsruhe.de> <5tvm90$dma$1@rtl.cygnus.com> <34044F42.41C6@signature.below> <8p667so5k5z.fsf@Eng.Sun.COM> <3081935990099181@naggum.no> <87lo1jy4cq.fsf@serpentine.com> <87d8mtx8s3.fsf@serpentine.com> <3082185140465031@naggum.no> <3410CC6F.C989D6D@netscape.com> <3082526820039054@naggum.no> <3411AF41.3C0C7985@netscape.com> mail-copies-to: never Organization: Naggum Software; +47 8800 8879; http://www.naggum.no Newsgroups: comp.lang.scheme,comp.lang.lisp * Jamie Zawinski | Starting any statement with "these kids today" is grumpy-old-man | thinking. Hackers are hackers. I haven't met too many sixteen year olds | recently, but the few who have made their way into my office or mailbox | have lived up to my expectations of what kind of people they would be. computers, programming languages, and tools have all become vastly more complex. the focus on appearance in modern software translates to very time-consuming, manual work for the programmer. there is growing concern that good, compact code is so much harder to maintain and company loyalty is so low that managers prefer to hire less educated programmers. there is more demand on kids to go through formal education and get good grades. these are changes in the outside world that intelligent kids respond to in the best way they can. their response is to go for the quick buck and not to spend time on learning more than to operate bleeding-edge tools that will be obsolete in a few months. I don't think I'm a grumpy old man, but I remember that I had time to spend on stuff that had no immediate value to me, but which were just fun to discover, but from what I see, there appears to be very little time left for those who don't want to drop out of the system completely for this kind of exploratory playing. #\Erik -- 404 You're better off without that file. Trust me.