quote:
Originally posted by Baron Munchausen:
Once you check into what must actually be used to program in Wind'oohs these days you will realize that there's nothing 'trivial' about programming anymore.
Someday the monster will die. I am not too old to wait and cheer the return of sanity when that happens. I will NEVER EVER PROGRAM IN WINDOWS. It just feeds the beast when programs use it. If that means I write no programs, as has been the case since my Amiga died, then so be it....
To the younger generation, things CHANGE. Slowly but surely time grinds down even the most powerful, in a free society. Look at IBM and the story of mainframes as an example. I do not know what their market share is now, but the Last time I looked, they sold less than 20% of the world's computers. Well, at one time they sold 85%, having driven dozens of others out of the market, including FAR FAR better products. Just as an example, my university used the best timesharing machine ever built, the Xerox Sigma IX. Fifteen YEARS after Xerox threw in the towel, there were STILL a dozen of them being used by devoted owners who desperately cannibalized dead machines and improvised replacement parts to keep them running. The CPV operating system Xerox developed was ported IIRC to a Honeywell machine and named CP VI to attract former Sigma owners. Of course desktops killed the mainframe concept, but something similar will happen to them as well - handhelds and visors.....