Thank you Joachim!

That is the most honest assessment of the situation of Smalltalk in 2017
that I have ever seen.

And I agree with you 100%.

We need a new Smalltalk which is both "cool" and can seamlessly integrate
with all of the latest web technologies.

I will be releasing a new Smalltalk framework very shortly called
"Smalltalk Express".

The interpreter is written in the "Go" language and can run on all of the
major web platforms such as Google, Heroku, etc.

I use Pharo to manage the Smalltalk code.

Here is a new blog that I have started to discuss the project.

https://smalltalkexpress.quora.com/

Also, I have reserved the web address "smalltalk.express" for use once the
code goes live.

There is a video in the blog post so you can get an idea of where things
stand right now.

-- Peter





On Fri, Oct 20, 2017 at 3:23 AM, jtuc...@objektfabrik.de <
jtuc...@objektfabrik.de> wrote:

> First of all: I'd say the question itself is not a question but an excuse.
> I am not arguing there are enough Smalltalkers or cheap ones. But I think
> the question is just a way of saying "we don't want to do it for reasons
> that we ourselves cannot really express". If you are a good developer,
> learning Smalltalk is easy. If you are a good developer you've heard the
> sentence "we've taken the goos parts from x,y,z and Smalltalk" at least
> twice a year. So you most likely would like to learn it anyways.
>
> A shortage of developers doesn't exist. What exists is an unwillingness of
> companies to get people trained in a technology. If Smalltalk was cool and
> great in their opinion, they wouldn't care. It's that simple. As a
> consultant, I've heard that argument so often. Not ferom Startups, but from
> insurance companies, Banks or Car manufacturers who spend millions on
> useless, endless meetings and stuff instead of just hiring somebody to
> teach a couple of developers Smalltalk. It's just a lie: the shortage of
> Smalltalk developers is not a problem.
>
> And, to be honest: what is it we actually are better in by using Smalltalk?
> Can we build cool looking web apps in extremely short time? No.
> Can we build mobile Apps with little effort? No.
> Does our Smalltalk ship lots of great libraries for all kinds of things
> that are not availabel in similar quality in any other language?
> Are we lying when we say we are so extremely over-productive as compared
> to other languages?
>
> I know, all that live debugging stuff and such is great and it is much
> faster to find & fix a bug in Smalltalk than in any other environment I've
> used so far. But that is really only true for business code. When I need to
> connect to things or want to build a modern GUI or a web application with a
> great look&feel, I am nowhere near productive, because I simply have to
> build my own stuff or learn how to use other external resources. If I want
> to build something for a mobile device, I will only hear that somebody
> somewhere has done it before. No docs, no proof, no ready-made tool for me.
>
>
> Shortage of developers is not really the problem. If Smalltalk was as cool
> as we like to make ourselves believe, this problem would be non-existent.
> If somebody took out their iPad and told an audience: "We did this in
> Smalltalk in 40% of the time it would have taken in Swift", and if that
> something was a must-have for people, things would be much easier. But
> nobody has.
>
>
> I am absolutely over-exaggerating, because I make my living with an SaaS
> product written in Smalltalk (not Pharo). I have lots of fun with Smalltalk
> and - as you - am convince that many parts of what we've done so far
> would've taken much longer or even be impossible in other languages. But
> the advantage was eaten by our extremely steep learning curve for web
> technologies and for building something that works almost as well as tools
> like Angular or jQuery Mobile.
>
> Smalltalk is cool, and the day somebody shows me something like Google's
> flutter in Smalltalk, I am ready to bet a lot on a bright future for
> Smalltalk. But until then, I'd say these arguments about productivity are
> just us trying to make ourselves believe we're still the top of the food
> chain. We've done that for almost thirty years now and still aren't ready
> to stop it. But we've been lying to ourselves and still do so.
>
> I don't think there is a point in discussing about the usefulness of a
> language using an argument like the number or ready-made developers. That
> is just an argument they know you can't win. The real question is and
> should be: what is the benefit of using Smalltalk. Our productivity
> argument is a lie as soon as we have to build something that uses or runs
> on technology that has been invented after 1990.
>
>
> Okay, shoot ;-)
>
> Joachim
>
>
> --
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------
> Objektfabrik Joachim Tuchel          mailto:jtuc...@objektfabrik.de
> Fliederweg 1                         http://www.objektfabrik.de
> D-71640 Ludwigsburg                  http://joachimtuchel.wordpress.com
> Telefon: +49 7141 56 10 86 0         Fax: +49 7141 56 10 86 1
>
>
>

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