I understood your question, but I do not have a good answer. I,
unfortunately, see trends that I do not like. For example, I have been
told that Boeing is having a lot of trouble finding subcontractors who are
willing to use Ada (for commercial avionics). So they are looking at
Java. The project I am currently finishing had a requirement to use
C. When I asked why not allow Ada, they used the "Worried that there will
not be anyone to maintain it in the future" argument. For a new project,
the software Lead wanted to use Ada, but the developers talked him out of it.
Is this valid "data"? No. Too small a sample. Not a scientific
study. Extrapolations are generally only valid for a small delta time past
the present.
Roger Racine
At 11:10 AM 7/29/2002 , Ed Colbert wrote:
>Hi Craig
>
>Was my question too obscure? What I meant was do you think there will
>be new software projects using Ada 5, 10, 20 years from now? Also, do
>you think there will be more or fewer Ada compiler and tool suppliers?
>
>Take care,
>Ed
>
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Craig Carey [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
>Sent: Friday, July 26, 2002 11:37 PM
>To: Ed Colbert
>Subject: Millions of lines of code : Re: What's Ada's life expectancy?
>
>
>
>Reply
>
>At 02\07\26 16:15 -0700 Friday, Ed Colbert wrote:
> >Hi All,
> >
> >I was asked, "what's Ada's life expectancy?" I thought I'd get the
> >consensus of this group before I respond.
> >
> >I'd appreciate any data you have to support your position?
> >
>
>
>The life expectancy ?:
>
>mailto:[log in to unmask]&body=ada-comment
>
>It seems that some of the defects in Ada need to remain even though
>they could be removed. However features seem to be easier to add.
Roger Racine
Draper Laboratory, MS 31
555 Technology Sq.
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
617-258-2489
617-258-3939 Fax
|