I want to try using a fluffy pop song to sell a protest album... it worked for
others before me:) If you're really lucky, some people will accidentally listen
to your other songs.
(metaphorically speaking)
A spoonful of sugar
--
Casey
On Jul 25, 2011, at 10:47 PM, Alan Kay
On 26/07/2011, at 3:47 PM, Alan Kay wrote:
But the dilemma is: what happens if this is the route and the children and
adults reject it for the much more alluring human universals? Even if almost
none of them lead to a stable, thriving, growth inducing and prosperous
civilization?
These
On 26/07/2011, at 12:20 PM, Igor Stasenko wrote:
You lost me here. My attitude to Ruby is same as to Perl: lets take
bit from here, bit from there, mix well everything and voila! , we
having new programming language.
It may be good for cooking recipe, but definitely not very good for
On 26/07/2011, at 12:20 PM, Igor Stasenko wrote:
But for programming its a bit different: you giving to people a tool
which they will use to craft their own products. And depending on how
good/bad this tool are, the end product's quality will vary.
And also, it would be too good to be
On 26/07/2011, at 12:20 PM, Igor Stasenko wrote:
Say, for example, like making a telephone that is vastly more easy to use
than all other telephones on the planet. Now, for tech geeks, it's not
really *that* much easier to use... For example, when the iPhone came out, I
got one, and the
The argument about mass popularity is good if all you want to do is triumph
in
the consumer products business (c.f. many previous raps I've done about the
anthropological human universals and how and why technological amplifiers for
them have been and will be very popular).
This is because