
Java had a relatively slow uptake in enterprise and a meteoric rise in universities - that is really starting to pay off now as graduates look to java as a solution first (the first graduates brought up on java are just getting into decision making roles). Universities will accept Haskell for "ideological" reasons whereas enterprise needs practical benefits. At the moment, Haskell offers more of the former and so the focus should be on the Unis. Matt On 01/12/2004, at 1:00 AM, GoldPython wrote:
Hi, all,
I'm new to the Cafe, but not to Haskell (experimented with it on and off on a small scale over the last 5 or 6 years and enjoy the language quite a lot) and had more of a political question and wanted to see what people thought:
Has anyone tried presenting the language to the average rank and file programming community? If so, was it successful? If not, is there interest in doing so?
By "rank and file" I mean, outside of the acedemic world where a large number of the programmers I see have very little math background. This would be the typical commercial Visual Basic crowd and the like.
Thanks, Will Collum _______________________________________________ Haskell-Cafe mailing list Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe