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journal.dedasys.com
I fiddled around with Erlang the first time a number of years ago, and have come back to it off and on ever since. I’m currently using it professionally, and enjoying the experience a lot. However, Erlang has always struck me as a language that is not particularly “well-rounded”: the best in the business at certain things, and… not always a lot of fun for others. String handling for instance.
I've written about Erlang in the past, and my suspicion that, soon or later, other languages/systems will come along and "eat its lunch". Scala is one such potential contender. Another that has been gaining some visiblity lately is node.js, a simple framework for creating networked applications on top of Google's V8 Javascript engine. I should define what Erlang's lunch is a little bit better be
I’ve been pondering this subject for a while, and I think I’m finally ready to write about it. Tcl was, for many years, my go-to language of choice. It’s still near and dear to me in many ways, and I even worked on a portion of a book about it ( https://journal.dedasys.com/2009/09/15/tcl-and-the-tk-toolkit-2nd-edition ). However, examining what “went wrong” is quite interesting, if one attempts, a
Update: since I did these statistics, Linode has upgraded their memory offering even more, which means that their offer is even better than what I show here. As of summer 2010, Slicehost's offering really isn't very competitive, unfortunately. I continue to hear that they do provide great service, but so does Linode. Since hosting is *the* major expense for http://www.dedasys.com, and obviously
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