I hate to feed trolls, but this is a solid example of passive-
aggresive behavior. Also, ignoring plausible sounding, spell-checked
diatribes is bad.

The installation of one or two jar files from a Maven repository is
par for the JVM course. Deployment? Works on any reasonable JVM out
there. Could the install/deploy behavior be improved? Sure, but try
targeting something less ubiquitous than "ant". Slackware more modern
than Ubuntu??

Contrasting Clojure with Flash on Ubuntu really takes the cake. Flash
has never had a good reputation outside of Windows. Also, either the
poster is running as root (!) or has somehow forgotten a very
important su/sudo between steps 2 and 3. Either way, no sysadmin has
to be convinced.

Wresting with pigs is bad because you get dirty and the pig likes it.

On Mar 21, 2:42 pm, Tim Johnson <t...@johnsons-web.com> wrote:
> I have evaluated clojure for the last couple of days, and it is both my own
> professional decision and my recommendation to the professional organizations
> that I belong to and report to that clojure is not ready for prime time.
>
> Before any of you think that I am a disgruntled newbie turned troll, know
> the following:
>
> 1)As soon as I see the copy of this email in my "clojure mailbox", I will
> unsubscribe from this mailing list, delete the clojure mailbox and I will not
> be following up in any way.
>
> 2)In as much as clojure is a new programming language with a small but
> enthusiastic user base and a brilliant developer I confess to a certain deja 
> vu
> here. That would be rebol 10 years ago. Brilliantly conceived, brilliantly
> designed by one of the best programmers on the planet. Never went anywhere.
> I've used rebol for 10 years steadily and made a lot of money with it, but
> there is almost 0 demand for rebol programmers out there.
>
> 3)Although I may be a noob with it comes to clojure and even more of a noob
> when it comes to java, I have been a professional analyst and programmer for 
> 21
> years and own my own company. Many seasoned programmers, analysts and system
> adminstrators look at a new system as something to "employ". As a front end 
> for
> java, I do not consider clojure to be "employable".
>
> I think that clojure is brilliantly conceived and it is clear from what I have
> read of Rich Hickey's words that his vision is right in the same channel with
> mine, but that is not the problem. The fact that I respect the developer and
> the product is the reason that I have taken this time to write this email.
>
> The reason I choose NOT to employ clojure can be summed up in three words.
> -------------------
> Install and deploy.
> -------------------
>
> I consider this to be clojure's fatal weakness. Certainly I can get clojure up
> and running, but "selling" clojure to a sysadmin is going to be a problem at
> this time. There was a time when PHP was NOT present on virtually all 
> webservers.
> PHP got it's "foot in the door" because it was very easy to deploy.
>
> Consider the two threads that I started up - one is titled "Web programming in
> Clojure" - there's the good stuff. Generous reponse, lots of input.
>
> The other one is titled "Installation issues on slack 13.0 (ant?)". This where
> it all falls apart.
>
> Sadly, this is like the first impression and we all know how lasting first
> impressions are. In fact as you can see, the thread ended with no resolution.
> I'm sorry to pick on "steve" but his response is a case study
>
> * Steve <stephen.a.lind...@gmail.com> [100320 05:24]:
>
> > Reading the getting started page on the website will get you further
> > still :http://clojure.org/getting_started
>
> Sadly inadequate! Check out the comparable kawa resources and instructions for
> a better example.
>
> > If you do need ant then a more modern distro will make your life much
> > easier (eg. apt-get install ant).
>
> Again, so inadequate. I also use ubuntu. Have for years. apt-get is a thing
> of beauty. When it works. And bye the way, slackware is much more modern
> when it comes to up-to-date build tools. So know I not only have to "sell"
> clojure to the sysadmins, I have to sell them ubuntu too? Good luck with
> that!
>
> Here's how I installed the flash player on my system.
> 1)Downloaded install_flash_player_10_linux.tar.gz
> 2)Unzipped libflashplayer.so
> 3)Copied to /usr/lib/firefox-3.5.2/plugins/
>
> Make clojure "install and deployment" like the example above and more of us 
> will
> EMPLOY clojure and 10 years from now there WILL be a market for clojure
> programmers.
>
> Goodby and good luck.
> --
> Tim
> t...@johnsons-web.comhttp://www.akwebsoft.com

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