Happy New Year, everyone!

Over the last year, I went through a rather extensive tour and I directly 
exposed Moose, GT and Pharo to some 2000+ technical people through various 
sessions and trainings at conferences and companies. The tour will continue 
this year.

Most of the sessions are not directly about Moose, GT or Pharo, but about 
broader topics that are served through what we do around here. These topics can 
relate to solving problems without reading code, to steering agile 
architecture, or more recently, to even broader topics like software 
environmentalism. If you are wondering what software environmentalism is, 
please take a look at this talk:
https://youtu.be/N3l3eB62oSw?list=PLqvTNJtc942Cs9Qo4ikCGrUNtAw93Q0JA

I now have the confirmation that there is a whole space which is unaddressed by 
mainstream technologies. Often people find themselves frustrated having to 
build their systems on top of opaque technologies with not much hope of 
understanding what is going on under the hood both because they do not have 
access to what is behind and because they are provided lack the tools to 
investigate. You see, developers are suppose to have the coolest job on the 
planet, and many of them are unhappy. This has to change, and we can do that.

In a conversation I had with a highly respected researcher, after explaining 
how our tools allow us to work, he noted reluctantly “so, you are claiming that 
you are practicing a fundamentally different software engineering?”. This 
question took me a little by surprise because the only answer I found myself 
being able to provide was “yes”. I sent him this talk:
https://youtu.be/XWOOJa3kEa0?list=PLqvTNJtc942Cs9Qo4ikCGrUNtAw93Q0JA

It is strange to be in the position to tell the world that we are constructing 
something fundamentally better, but I really do believe that we are.

I wish you a happy and bold new year!

Cheers,
Doru


--
www.tudorgirba.com
www.feenk.com

"Every thing should have the right to be different."





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