On Wednesday, 19 August 2015 at 23:59:54 UTC, Bill Baxter wrote:
Or at least that's the impression one might get from reading this Wired
article:
http://www.wired.com/2015/08/googles-house-programming-language-now-runs-phones/?mbid=social_gplus

"""
[Go] is at the forefront of a new breed of languages that can rapidly execute code across a large number of systems, while still allowing large teams of coders to build this code at speed. This also includes languages such D, used at Facebook, and Rust, developed at Mozilla, the organization
behind the Firefox web browser.
"""

--bb

It was very interesting to hear the comments from the CEO of Weka (Israeli storage startup) - they have stuff they want to share, but not so much time to do it themselves. So they were appealing for a competent D freelancer to help on a paid basis to do so. I wonder if they have filled this need - if not, should it not be on the D recruiting site?

More generally, I think there is benefit to creating different channels for different use domains on the main web site. The kinds of problems you have in similar domains tend to recur (if they truly are similar domains), but the answers are fragmented and not to be found in one's place.

John Colvin made an excellent point about using D for science (it's not a question of unshiny marketing that can be polished, but of no marketing). His point applies more generally:

https://duckduckgo.com/?q=dlang+game+programming
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=dlang+bioinformatics
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=dlang+financial+data


Journalists have a difficult job to do, and if one has a message to communicate, it's always helpful to make it easy for them. [That also means having a set of contacts for different domains that they can contact for quotes, background briefing and so on].

We could do better here, I think. Colvin's work is a start. Who else will step up? I am doing what I can in my small way, which isn't much for now, but might be a lot in a few years.



Laeeth.

Reply via email to