People in tech industry, seem to have no idea how the systems in the wild work. Enterprise Java runs the backbone of operations for all of large business organisations such as banks. It is just as grounded as MS Office is. It is object-oriented software that is running the bulk of production environments of the world. Who is going to maintain these systems for the next few decades?
And in reality, there is nothing wrong with Java or object orientation. It has the best battle-tested and rich ecosystem to build enterprise systems. It mirrors the business entities and a natural hierarchy and evolution of things. It has vast pool of skilled resources and easy to maintain. Python is still a baby when it comes operational readiness and integrations. You might get excited about Jupyter cells and REPL, but that is all a dev-play, not production.
Notice the prerequisite to unlearning something is learning it first. I don't think anyone proposes that the concept of an object is useless.
I wonder what obscure (probably online?) source of information of today we'll be comparing to the mainstream sources of tomorrow.
[1] https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2011/oct/09/steve-job...
Pretty nice to see it context, next to all the other editions.
> I wonder what obscure (probably online?) source of information of today we'll be comparing to the mainstream sources of tomorrow.
Maybe this very website will be among them?
[1] https://wholeearth.info/p/whole-earth-epilog-october-1974?fo...