[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: More predictions to mull over
Len Bullard wrote: > Weâve had the same â⦠is deadâ predictions for lots of languages and > technologies. Weâve been having the same debates on the VRML/X3D lists > since those statements from the gamers that âno one serious does > anything withâ¦.â some months ago. Fortran is still out there, Cobol is > still out there and any time someone says âyes, but who caresâ, check > out which language is running a lot of missile control systems and which > one is still running a lot of banks. Densities change but not the fact > of for a sizable x there is some evidence of n. > Dead or dying. CORBA is dead. DOS, Cobol and Fortran are dying. I teach at an engineering school, and I'm one of the few people there (including among the faculty) who knows anything about Fortran. I don't know anyone who still uses it, though probably there are still a few physics professors who are happily coding away in Fortran, but they'll all retire in the next few few years. Languages like COBOL and Fortran are petrified fossils. So are operating systems like DOS, OS/2, and Mac OS 9. There is a huge amount of useful legacy software that keeps chugging along on these platforms, but nobody is dong anything new with them. At most they're carefully maintaining the old stuff. They're like decommissioned satellites left in a slowly decaying orbit for years or decades. Eventually however they will burn up in the atmosphere. On the other hand tech like CORBA and OSI that never achieved orbit or even left the launch pad in the first place are thoroughly dead. They don't even have much of a legacy to support. Maybe VRML was written off prematurely and will still take off. I don't know. But there are a lot of dead technologies out there. Java, C++, Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, XML are all alive and are the hearts of vibrant ecosystems of new code. It's not just the size of x that matters. It's the velocity. -- Elliotte Rusty Harold elharo@m... Java I/O 2nd Edition Just Published! http://www.cafeaulait.org/books/javaio2/ http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0596527500/ref=nosim/cafeaulaitA/
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