I don't think that this has anything to do with Perl specifically, I
think that anything that doesn't change significantly for 10 years is
not going to be seen as flashy. It's not that it's bad, it's just the
way that things work. The VW bug was a great car, but after a
production run of some 70
Quoting the Free On Line Dictionary:
trend - a general direction in which something tends to move;
Define the something and the area of movement and then you will be
talking business.
Is there a trend of developers moving to Ruby and Python? Sure. Is there
a trend of developers that
Like I replied to Joel's post...
There's plenty of buzz about Perl. See our freshly released website
http://perlbuzz.com/
From our Why Perlbuzz? page at http://perlbuzz.com/why-
perlbuzz.html :
--quote--
We hear it all the time: Is Perl still around? I thought that
everyone moved on to
On Wed, Oct 03, 2007 at 11:02:06AM -0600, Danny Brian ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Very nice work Andy.
Thank you. It's very specifically an advocacy site, but outside the
Perl Foundation auspices. I welcome feedback, stories, etc from anyone.
xoa
--
Andy Lester = [EMAIL PROTECTED] =
Very nice work Andy.
One place I've noticed a potential source of good articles is a
Google news search:
http://news.google.com/news?q=perl
In particular, there are about 5 or 6 recent ZDNet White Papers of
Perl success stories by way of O'Reilly Media. These include the
Oxford
Hi all!
There is an interesting discussion about Perl here:
http://discuss.joelonsoftware.com/default.asp?joel.3.546349.20
Quoting it:
For some reasons there are lots of buzz about Ruby, Javascript, Python but not
too much about Perl. Why is that? What makes Perl less trendy than those