Carsten Haese <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Thu, 2005-12-22 at 07:01, Peter Hansen wrote: > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > So exactly how high is python in Google's priority list ? Or in other > > > words, if python is in a stand still as it is now, what would be the > > > impact to Google ? > > > > Since when is Python in a standstill? > > I believe bonono meant the question in the hypothetical sense of "If > Python would stand still in its current state, what would be the impact > to Google?" but didn't know how to ask it correctly.
Answering generically rather than on the basis of any inside information, like for any other technology, a lot would depend on how other technologies "competing" for similar uses are faring. If _every_ programming language were suddenly to undergo the same "standing still", then the technological stasis would affect every company using programming languages, regardless of their specific technology choices: productivity growth would slow across the board (not stop, of course -- cfr. e.g. Tenner's "Our Own Devices" for very readable analysis of the effects of the developments of technology versus technique) but the competitive situation would be unaffected. If, on the other hand, technology X was to suddently stand still while competing technology Y keeps showing real improvements, this would progressively tilt the competitive playing field against companies heavily invested in X and not in Y; eventually such companies would have to pay the costs of switching to Y, or suffer a deterioration in their competitive position. That Google's heavily invested in Python is hardly inside information (I believe we have a quote to that effect by Peter Norvig on python.org). Of course, this pretty obvious analysis treats "Python" as a whole technology -- it doesn't particularly care whether "improvements" come to the language per se, to the libraries, to the implementation, etc, it just takes as "improvement" any change that does enhance existing users' productivity (indeed, changes that do so without requiring any training or much work, such as compiling an unchanged language to faster code, might have more immediate impact than new language features, which would only enter into use slowly and gradually). Alex -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list