Am 07.05.2012 15:30, schrieb Steven Schveighoffer:
On Mon, 07 May 2012 09:22:05 -0400, Paulo Pinto <pj...@progtools.org>
wrote:

This just confirms what I saw yesterday on a presentation.

Many developers re-invent the wheel, or jump to the fad technology of the
year, because they don't have the knowledge of old already proven
technologies,
that for whatever reason, are no longer common.

We need better ways to preserve knowledge in our industry.

Again, don't take offense. I never suggested Java's use of an already
existing technology was in some way a "new" thing, just that it proves
it can work.

I'm sure back in the day, TurboPascal had to walk uphill through the
snow to school both ways too. :)

-Steve


No offense taken.

My reply was just a small rant, based on your answer on lack of contact
with Turbo Pascal and other languages I mentioned.

Yesterday I watched a presentation, where the guy complains on knowledge
being lost due to the lack of proper mentors in the industry,

http://www.infoq.com/presentations/The-Frustrated-Architect

I have spent a huge time in the university learning about compiler
development, reading old books and papers from the early computing days.

So in a general way, and not directed to you now, I saddens me that a great part of that knowledge is lost to most youth nowadays.

Developers get amazed with JavaScript JIT compilation, and yet it already existed in Smalltalk systems.

Go advertises fast compilation speeds, and they were already available
to some language systems in the late 70's, early 80's.

We are discussing storing module interfaces directly in the library files, and most seem to never heard of it.

And the list goes on.

Sometimes I wonder what do students learn in modern CS courses.

--
Paulo


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