Tell them that if you were instead on Rails, you'd have a huge chance of being hit by a train, which is likely to deal far more damage than a bus.
2011/12/16 Michael Litchard <[email protected]> > I'm learning what it means to be a professional Haskell programmer, > and contemplating taking on side jobs. The path of least resistance > seems to be web applications, as that is what I do at work. I've been > investigating what some web developers have to say about their trade. > One article addresses the question above. His answer was that he uses > RoR which has a large community and he is therefore easily > replaceable. My question, for freelancers in general, and web > developers in particular is this: How do you address this question? I > imagine potential clients would need to be assuaged of their fears > that hiring me would lead to a lock-in situation at best, and no one > to maintain a code base at worst. Lock-in won't be part of my business > model, also sooner or later we part ways with the client. When the > client wonders, "What happens then?", what is a good answer? > > _______________________________________________ > Haskell-Cafe mailing list > [email protected] > http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe >
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