Ada is not used in finance here in the US to any large degree. This is part of the same issue I have with other domains. The leaders in these industries are not "S/W" people and they stick to what they know. There is no S/W Ph.D. that is ever going to design a spacecraft! Or a bank/financial system. Unless he also has a Ph.D. in Astrophysics or Finance. My point is that we should be putting effort into teaching S/W Engineering to ALL engineers or other target domains. Making more S/W Engineers who will be relegated to doing CM or managing the CMM/ISO Level of the organization is not going to improve S/W architectures. Bill Dale > -----Original Message----- > From: Gloster [SMTP:[log in to unmask]] > Sent: Tuesday, July 30, 2002 3:40 AM > To: [log in to unmask] > Subject: Re: What's Ada's life expectancy? > > Wiiliam Dale Jr proposed: > > "The difference is that COBOL found a large user base - finance - that has > great need and deep pockets. [..]" > > Banks used to use Ada too. Not all have abandoned it, but to quote from a > recent > recruitment agency's advertisement for financial ADA programmers: > > "Vorgesehen ist eine Migration von Ada über die nächsten Jahre auf eine > andere > OO-Sprache" (a migration from Ada to another OO language over the coming > years > is foreseen) ( HTTP://WWW.Iares.Ch/account660/cgi-bin/Reporter.exe?ID=303 > ). > (Actually I overlooked the word "andere" (other) before and wrote a letter > > pointing out that Ada 83 (which the job is for) has been followed by the > OO Ada > 95.) > > (The webpage correctly has "Ada", but an email from the company had > "ADA".) > > Anyhow, Dirk Craeynest has reported on many Ada jobs announced in a weekly > > general jobs emailed newsletter.