> Nim isn't for the "enterprise", which makes programming language choices > based on how easy it would be to hire replacement programmers. At least not > yet.
That's very interesting. It makes sense because of less bootstrap time, but if the company has people who are so thick headed that they can only code in the languages they already know, the company has another problem. That reminds me of Paul Graham's Hackers & painters: big corporations suck. the ones who survive only suck a little bit less.