I found that page very shallow and superficial. What they call "the language of the future" is actually the language of the present. Python (but also, Ruby, Perl, Smalltalk, Lisp, Scheme, ...) have already most of the features they list.
Then they claim "the language of the future will be so different from the languages we have now that we cannot imagine how it will be". This is pretty naive. A Lisper would say that nothing new happened in the last 40 years. Actually, I think that something new happened, but not that much. The progress was more in the technology than in the programming paradigms. I mean, OO was already there in Simula. It this very possible that the language of 2045 will not be very different from the current dynamic languages. The all page reminds me of the excitation of 60's about the space program (affirmations such "in the year 2000 we will have colonies on Mars") We all know how it ended :-( Michele Simionato -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list