Yes, thanks for sharing it Richard.

For me the issue with wisdom of the crowd arguments is, as you point at
the end of the article, that also crowd can be pretty stupid, so
when/how you difference between both cases? At some point seems like
crowd is wise when they share my opinion and dumb when they don't. A
different argument I have found in favor or non-popular but powerful
languages is made by Matthew Butterick[1] in the case of Lisp/Racket by
deconstructing the ad-populum falacy (something is good, because is
popular) and then going beyond the frequent flattery of authoritative
voices, giving real examples from a first person perspective. I think
that is an interesting and novel approach for advocacy.

[1] http://practicaltypography.com/why-racket-why-lisp.html

Cheers,

Offray

On 22/08/17 12:09, Ben Coman wrote:
> nice article. thanks for sharing.
> cheers -ben
>
> On Tue, Aug 22, 2017 at 4:14 AM, horrido <horrido.hobb...@gmail.com
> <mailto:horrido.hobb...@gmail.com>> wrote:
>
>     I'm glad people in the programming community are recognizing the
>     value of
>     Smalltalk:  The Wisdom of the Crowd
>     <https://medium.com/@richardeng/the-wisdom-of-the-crowd-c7aff954bd5f
>     <https://medium.com/@richardeng/the-wisdom-of-the-crowd-c7aff954bd5f>> 
>     . I
>     was very pleasantly surprised by this.
>
>
>
>     --
>     View this message in context:
>     http://forum.world.st/The-Wisdom-of-the-Crowd-Redux-tp4963261.html
>     <http://forum.world.st/The-Wisdom-of-the-Crowd-Redux-tp4963261.html>
>     Sent from the Pharo Smalltalk Users mailing list archive at
>     Nabble.com.
>
>

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