| > The time you've spent on old languages is never really lost. Fair enough, to each his own. My time spent writing programs for the Apple II in the late 1970s, in 6502 assembly code, was largely non-transferable: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_Writer > Every language that you learn and abandon, makes you understand the next one much quicker. Yes, I think that's generally true, with one possible infamous exception: BASIC as it once was, with line numbers and numeric GOTOs all over the place -- a real nightmare for large projects. > I am not that keen on delegating node work at this time, because I want to play a bit more with it by myself. It might be interesting to ask older programmers if they resisted getting into management simply because coding is such a pleasant occupation. We might find a lot of people unwilling to give up coding, even with a salary differential. |