That's the first part of what I saw too. After that, it says "The public
release of this presentation will be in the next month.".



On Sun, Jul 13, 2014 at 12:13 PM, Job van der Zwan <j.l.vanderz...@gmail.com
> wrote:

> I get a different message:
>
> *Thank you for attending Strange Loop 2013*
>> This is a restricted presentation that can only be viewed by Strange Loop
>> 2013 attendees!
>>
> Which is odd, because I didn't attend in the first place.
>
>
> On Sunday, 13 July 2014 17:24:22 UTC+2, Leah Hanson wrote:
>
>> Looks like it will be next month: http://www.infoq.com/
>> presentations/julia-dispatch?utm_source=infoq&utm_medium=
>> QCon_EarlyAccessVideos&utm_campaign=StrangeLoop2013
>>
>>
>> On Sun, Jul 13, 2014 at 4:57 AM, Job van der Zwan <j.l.van...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> By the way, is video for the Strange Loop presentation linked near the
>>> end
>>> <http://nbviewer.ipython.org/gist/StefanKarpinski/b8fe9dbb36c1427b9f22>
>>> ever going to be public?
>>>
>>>
>>> On Sunday, 13 July 2014 04:55:43 UTC+2, Stefan Karpinski wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Graydon Hoare (original author of Rust) wrote a truly lovely essay in
>>>> two parts about the history of programming languages, the predominance of
>>>> two-language systems – or "Ousterhout-dichotomy languages," as he puts it –
>>>> Lisp's historical defiance of this dichotomy, Dylan as a successor to Lisp,
>>>> and finally Julia as a modern successor to Lisp and Dylan:
>>>>
>>>> http://graydon2.dreamwidth.org/3186.html
>>>> http://graydon2.dreamwidth.org/189377.html
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> This is a great read and an edifying historical perspective, regardless
>>>> of the Julia bit at the end, but may be especially interesting to folks on
>>>> julia-users.
>>>>
>>>
>>

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