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by incepted
3725 days ago
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That would be a powerful argument if you could prove the code path enabling this uses Erlang. According to Wikipedia, shortly after Armstrong was let go of Ericsson, the company quickly ripped out Erlang from all its products and replaced it with C and C++. |
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> In 1998 Ericsson announced the AXD301 switch, containing over a million lines of Erlang[...].[8] Shortly thereafter, Ericsson Radio Systems banned the in-house use of Erlang for new products, citing a preference for non-proprietary languages. The ban caused Armstrong and others to leave Ericsson.[9] The implementation was open-sourced at the end of the year.[5] Ericsson eventually lifted the ban; it re-hired Armstrong in 2004.[9][...]
> Erlang has now been adopted by companies worldwide, including Nortel and T-Mobile. Erlang is used in Ericsson’s support nodes, and in GPRS, 3G and LTE mobile networks worldwide.[10]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erlang_%28programming_language...