Sherm et al.,
I know that a great deal of Bioinformatics people also use Perl ...
and Macs! If some of the framework could be shown how it would be
good for these people to use Camelbones, maybe that would help with
takeup. I tend to just use the Tk library for all my UI stuff (or web
browser) and don't worry about Cocoa at all. I agree that restricting
Perl to use in sysadmin work, or CGI development, is unfortunate. I
use if for everything ...
Good luck with the search for work! I'm happy to host downloads, etc.
from any of my servers.
Best wishes, John.
On 8 May 2007, at 22:25, Sherm Pendley wrote:
> On May 7, 2007, at 6:23 AM, David Cantrell wrote:
>
>> On Sun, May 06, 2007 at 08:25:49PM +0100, Alex Robinson wrote:
>>
>>> Why did the OS X loving bit of
>>> the perl community sit by and let PyObjC become the default bridge.
>>
>> Because the vast majority of perl people who moved to OS X did so
>> because it was Unix That Worked On A Laptop and not because it was
>> Mac.
>> Too many of us still sneer at anything non-Unix.
>
> It's not just in Mac circles either - there's a very widespread
> misconception that Perl is useful for system admins, web
> developers, and little else. One thing I find personally
> frustrating is the corollary, that Perl *programmers* must be
> admins or web devs. I find that frustrating because I'm not an
> admin, and while I don't mind web work, I don't want to focus on it
> exclusively.
>
> So, what can be done to change that? It's basically a PR/evangelism
> problem, which is well outside my area of expertise. Any suggestions?
>
> sherm--
>
> Web Hosting by West Virginians, for West Virginians: http://wv-www.net
> Cocoa programming in Perl: http://camelbones.sourceforge.net
>
>
Dr. John G. Keating
Department of Computer Science
National University of Ireland, Maynooth
Maynooth, Co. Kildare, IRELAND.
Email: john.keating@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
+353 1 708 3854
FAX: +353 1 708 3848
-----
Manny: Let's paaarrrtt ...
Bernard: Don't you dare use the word party as a verb in this shop ....


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