Andrei Alexandrescu Wrote:
> It's currently a growing niche as sequential speed doesn't scale anymore 
> by Moore's law. Depending on the interplay of discoveries in the coming 
> years, I believe it's not impossible that serial languages that spend 
> CPU cycles on dynamic interpretation might become a historical curiosity 
> caused by a fleeting context: (a) serial speed is large enough to allow 
> wasting some of it, (b) I/O is much slower than CPU and dominates the 
> performance profile of many programs, (c) many of today's computing 
> needs are materially covered with relatively little CPU effort. Any and 
> all such conditions may change in the future.
> 
> 
> Andrei

No one can predict the future, but I feel that your conclusion is in conflict 
with your above description. Because sequential speed does not scale, there is 
a search for non sequential solutions. Those steer _away_ from hand managed 
systems languages that make such programming harder. In fact, it makes even 
more sense to go dynamic to adapt the code for different platforms and 
scenarios. 
Erlang is an excellent example and is dynamic.

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