"So it's a question of who you're marketing to. Since we're marketing to
non-Smalltalkers (quite wise since 16% market penetration is the tipping
point [1], and we're not there yet)"

If you can get Pharo Smalltalk to be what makes people feel great about
using it and creating great applications with, it will succeed far more
than Ruby has in 5 years ahead. We need not push our efforts and energy in
labelling ( falsely ), that will give no impact / or add any value to the
perception of people.

Java succeeded because it enabled many to move on to the web enabled
world.. massively..

Rails succeeded because developers found it easier and simpler to bring up
a complete website and maintain it than its alternatives. JRuby helped in
as much Heroku did in its growth. Many developers made their fortune out of
Rails..

iPad, iPhone, iPod, now android phones / tablets succeed well and truly
because they enable the people to do what they want with it, make them feel
great about using them too and bigger bet was developing for the Appstore
and Android Market place that enabled many more to make money.

Can we move on to have a Pharo Appstore with a demand for the apps in the
store ... you will see more than 16% share you will need to make Pharo big.

http://skrishnamachari.wordpress.com/2014/04/29/pharo-is-a-smalltalk-dialect/





On Tue, Apr 29, 2014 at 5:54 AM, Sean P. DeNigris <[email protected]>wrote:

> Tudor Girba-2 wrote
> > There is a point of view from which one could say that
> > Pharo is Smalltalk by seeing Smalltalk as a movement, rather than
> specific
> > implementation. Unfortunately, everyone else thinks of Smalltalk as a
> > specific language, or set of languages with specific environments that
> > typically look old enough to not be relevant anymore.
>
> Yes! This is a tower of babel argument.
> For almost every programmer alive, Smaltalk = Smalltalk 80 -> Pharo is
> Smalltalk-inspired
> For us, Smaltalk = "experimental Dynabook software that bootstraps itself
> (ideally every 4 years)" -> Pharo is Smalltalk 109.
>
> So it's a question of who you're marketing to. Since we're marketing to
> non-Smalltalkers (quite wise since 16% market penetration is the tipping
> point [1], and we're not there yet), clearly "Pharo is Smalltalk-inspired"
> is the thing to say. It's not any more or less true than the latter, just
> more useful in its context.
>
> [1] http://www.ted.com/talks/simon_sinek_how_great_leaders_inspire_action
>
>
>
> -----
> Cheers,
> Sean
> --
> View this message in context:
> http://forum.world.st/a-Pharo-talk-from-a-ruby-conference-tp4756805p4756891.html
> Sent from the Pharo Smalltalk Developers mailing list archive at
> Nabble.com.
>
>

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