Mainframes running NFS make nice disk servers :) Adam Turk wrote: >>Consider this, though. Large numbers of programmers program in C >> > today. It's > >>definitely not dead in that sense. >> > > Yes. No one, I believe, will contend that point. > > >>If you consider change a measure of life, Lisp ought to be the winner. >> > It > >>certainly has more mutations than any other base language, by quite a >> > margin. > >>Arguably it's struggling, though. Unfortunately. >> > > Hmm... from looking at your posts, you must be a Lisp man. > > >>>C is arguably the one language we cannot let go of. >>> > >>Don't forget FORTRAN and COBOL. :-( >> > >>(and we'll never be rid of Visual Basic) >> > > Maybe I'm an idealist, but one day, all old mainframes will be suddenly > struck with a bout of entropy and turn to dust. > > > >>>From it springs all other contemporary languages. >>> > >>If you consider "all" to mean Java, C++, and Db. >> > > Ok. Qualification: All could mean: csh, C++, Java(Script), Perl (and > thereby, many others), PHP, and C#(the devil's langauge) > > > Adam > > I'm quite flattered, actually by the amount of thread, friend and flame > alike that my original comments spawned. Thanx to all. I'll publish as > "All, et Adam". > > > > -- hanasaki@hanaden.com Spam : def: It's not kosher.