Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 27th Dec 2012 10:19 UTC, submitted by anonymous
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Member since:
2008-10-28
With smartphones, tablets and app stores that let you click and install software to your heart's (and wallet's) content, I seriously doubt it.
If anything, it's far more likely that programming will increasingly become the domain of professionals and serious hobbyists. Think about it: in the late 70s and early 80s you switched on your computer and were greeted by the BASIC prompt that encouraged you to explore and try things out. Before that, everything was even harder because you had to buy a kit and actually assemble it yourself -- and decode the LEDs that served as the display and go the the User Group meeting and trade software (you had to write) with fellow enthusiasts.
Of course programming is a lot easier now, with plenty of languages to choose from, IDEs, online tutorials and whatnot. However, smartphones, tablets and walled gardens are creating a generation of pampered users. Not to be insulting, but when everything you need is usually one or two clicks/taps away, I can't see a lot people getting interested in programming just out of sheer curiosity.
RT.
Edited 2012-12-29 15:31 UTC