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Bhanu15.03.2012
many of the things Richard Dawkins has had to say again, over entwty centuries later. Your point?I dunno about anybody else, but I followed "Why Johnny Can't Code" without trouble. Perhaps this was only because I had actually mulled over similar thoughts a few times in the past several years, though nobody ever paid me for writing about them. And really, a big part of "Why Johnny Can't Code" comes back to the centripetal versus centrifugal problem. (I'm sure there's a better terminology for it, but until I can think of such jargon, I'll use the words already established here.) All our wonderful new and shiny programming languages, almost all of which trump BASIC in technical respects, are centrifugal phenomena. Just as we can each create a blog to fume and scream and dream, we can each pick a programming language of our choice or, in principle, develop a new one of our own.However, the blogosphere lacks mechanisms for bringing bloggers together in debate and deliberation. Blog "carnivals" are retrospective affairs; the people who assemble them are more like secretaries recording the minutes than presidents leading a meeting. Our language is revealing: we speak of "blog wars" but have no terms which cast inter-blog disputes in the same light as, for example, Supreme Court cases. (I am normally suspicious of , but I think that here one can make the case that the language reflects our habits of thought, though not perhaps shaping those habits.)We need a court system, but all we've got is trial by fire. While Time magazine tells us that we have built the digital reincarnation of the Athenian Agora, it's really more like a Viking feast house, with Beowulf's soldiers wearing mead-stained blankets and pretending to be philosopher-kings.Likewise, the Net-based proliferation of programming languages lacks the one thing which we had in the Dark Ages of line-number BASIC: that quality which DB has termed centripetal force. Think about it. With a thousand dialects to choose among, will any textbook publisher include sample code in their math books? The Web can make room for an indefinitely large family of languages, but no student is ever motivated to speak them. Whether our shiny new toys are free as in speech, free as in beer or both is irrelevant if they languish in obscurity.This is progress?As a programmer who has worked with a healthy sampling of modern languages, I happen to feel that we'd be better using our brainpower if we stopped inventing new dialects "for the kids" and started writing books which made students and teachers alike realize how useful the currently extant ones can be. I actually went to the Boston Public Library a few weekends ago to see if they had any "obsolete" high-school algebra books with BASIC samples in them. Unfortunately, the books I turned up were not obsolete enough: they had graphing-calculator exercises, but nothing like the program samples I remembered from tenth grade. An actual school library might be a better place to find such older books and see how far they were able to carry the concept. Come on, aren't you even curious to see what youngsters were expected to do ten years ago?I have elsewhere about our modern possibilities for discussion. Right now, I would like to emphasize that we haven't built the Agora yet. I suspect that many people who recognize deficiencies in our current systems shrug them off with a combination of the following thoughts: it's not my responsibility to fix them; I can see problems, but I'm not a computer programmer; starting the next MySpace or GooTube requires time and money; these things can take care of themselves.However, we can't all stand around waiting for the "centripetal force" to bring itself about.
*Nimi:
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*Turvakood: