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Programmers with network engineering skills
- Subject: Programmers with network engineering skills
- From: gbonser at seven.com (George Bonser)
- Date: Tue, 28 Feb 2012 08:14:35 +0000
- In-reply-to: <CADt_azYrMv_O-C2zjK5s72dMBs2m51eU3dKen2=VmpUh--kizw@mail.gmail.com>
- References: <CAHGyo+-ewO5nZi6FECA_nBWSHvQ7h7-okTa51LiwRJJWYyAfRA@mail.gmail.com> <CADt_azYrMv_O-C2zjK5s72dMBs2m51eU3dKen2=VmpUh--kizw@mail.gmail.com>
> Noon Silk said:
>
> Just a practical comment here; part of your problem may be offering c
> and php together. I don't want to start a war, but I know that at the
> very least all the c programmers I know would considered php to be ...
> "horribly offensive". So, maybe seperating out these two roles (c and
> php programming) will help you.
>
> It is definitely true (speaking as a programmer, C# for several years)
> that seeing +PHP would instantly turn me off. Further, I'm sure that
> almost anyone who is still programming in c these days would have the
> level of networking knowledge you care about (and can train on top of).
PHP tends to mesh well with things like perl programmers. It is basically a scripting language. Anyone using D ?