Hi Edwin,
On Wed, Jun 6, 2018 at 8:11 AM, Edwin Ancaer eancaer@gmail.com wrote:
Hello guys,
Now I am not counting on making massive amounts of money with Squeak, but I would like to know if someone with a good knowledge of Squeak environment, could arrive at applications that can relatively stand the comparison (taking into account that Squeak is open source) with applications developed with VA Smalltalk or Gemstone.
Please ask your question again using a separate thread instead of hijacking a very important thread on a specific subject.
Thank you.
I can imagine Squeak suffering a bit on the UI-part, but would there be much difference in supported functionalities, you think?
All applications are for personnal use, and as good looking an interface can be, I attach more importance to the usability of my applications anyway. Of course if one can get both....
Kind regards,
Edwin Ancaer
Op wo 6 jun. 2018 15:42 schreef Louis LaBrunda <Lou@keystone-software.com
:
Hi Germán,
Just an FYI, and not to knock Squeak or Pharo you might take a look at VA Smalltalk http://www.instantiations.com or GemStoneS https://gemtalksystems.com. May people use them to develop business and web applications with them.
Lou
Hi Dave:
I enjoyed a lot smalltalk and its communities but I failed thinking that
I
could make a living with it. Might be my lack of talent but other people with an infinite more capability than me failed at same way and my stubbornness for use Smalltalk in my business only made me lost lot of
time
and money.
Of course I miss the technical purity of Smalltalk and objects
everywhere,
but it is not viable, in my pov, to develop massive business
applications,
neither web, nor desktop and much less mobile.
Just my opinion.
Saludos / Regards, Germán Arduino @garduino
2018-06-01 23:39 GMT-03:00 David T. Lewis lewis@mail.msen.com:
On Fri, Jun 01, 2018 at 01:01:31PM -0300, Germ??n Arduino wrote:
2018-06-01 9:33 GMT-03:00 David T. Lewis lewis@mail.msen.com:
On Fri, Jun 01, 2018 at 12:50:08AM -0700, John Pfersich wrote: > Smalltalk is a hobby; I haven???t had an offer for Smalltalk work
since
>
>> As with you, Smalltalk is a hobby for me.
I should have realized this before and then I would not have wasted
20
years with Smalltalk, who barely bought me a cup or two of tea :(
You should think twice about this. If you thought that Smalltalk was
going
to make you rich, then you are probably a sad and disappointed person.
If
you thought that Smalltalk might be a tool to help you think clearly
and
explore new ideas, then you may be a happy and satisfied person.
I don't know if anyone will ever make any money by being happy and satisfied, but I can say that in my own experience that the learning that I have
done
with Squeak has been a big part of enabling me to make a decent income
in
the last 10 or 15 years of my professional life.
To put it in more concrete terms: I do systems integration work for a manufacturing company, and this involves (among other things) some
custom
software development (not Squeak, not Smalltalk). I am good at what I do, and I get paid for it. A significant part of the "I am good at what I do" aspect is attributable to Squeak, or more specifically the
learning
that I have derived from Squeak.
So I am a happy "hobby" Smalltalker. I make zero income from Squeak,
but I
can honestly tell you that a good deal of my actual professional income is supported by my hobby.
YMMV,
Dave
-- Louis LaBrunda Keystone Software Corp. SkypeMe callto://PhotonDemon