And to inspire all, this talk from Bret Victor is addressing the humane aspect 
in a very effective way
http://vimeo.com/115154289

I have the impression that Smalltalk would score high in a humane medium of 
expression evaluation 

... and if our UI/UX would be seriously improved lead by designers, not 
engineers, then Smalltalk could skyrocket its score in humane expression of 
computing.

LISP, and Clojure and Haskell are great but they will always have a high entry 
barrier due to taste acquisition of algebra as requisite. Smalltalk amazingly, 
eased that barrier while potentially allowing you the same computing power.

So what if?...

What if we partner with a design university that embraces this spirit (which is 
very friendly to them but they don't know)?

What I see is that if we do that, we might have a chance to achieve the best 
path that Bret proposes in his talk.

my 2 cents

from mobile

> On 27/12/2014, at 03:03, horrido <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I've launched a PR campaign to promote and advance the use of Smalltalk (and
> Amber):
> 
> http://smalltalkrenaissance.wordpress.com/
> <http://smalltalkrenaissance.wordpress.com/>  
> 
> I am seeking the support of the Smalltalk community.
> 
> My intention is to make Smalltalk Renaissance /a rallying point/ around
> which everyone can gather and contribute to this campaign. Over the coming
> weeks and months, I shall outline my plan (which is still evolving).
> 
> There have been many prior attempts to popularize Smalltalk. None have had
> any traction. Despite the best efforts of the Smalltalk community, today
> Smalltalk has become a largely forgotten language. (Smalltalk has fallen off
> the cliff at the TIOBE index, and it ranks poorly at Redmonk and
> langpop.corger.nl.) /I am trying something different./
> 
> Smalltalk Renaissance is a PR campaign. It is trying to /market/ Smalltalk,
> not on the exclusive basis of /technical merit/, but also by addressing
> criticisms and generating excitement about the future of software
> engineering. It is an ambitious campaign, but in this business, if you don't
> think *big*, then don't bother wasting your time.
> 
> 
> 
> --
> View this message in context: 
> http://forum.world.st/The-Smalltalk-Renaissance-Program-tp4797112.html
> Sent from the Pharo Smalltalk Developers mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
> 

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