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<div>I think most of the technologies you listed got sunk by changes in the tech eco-system as a whole. FoxPro was killed by MS but COBOL and dBase are still alive in there own niche's. I think PHP will suffer the same fate, there's definitely better languages
for writing full scale SaaS applications in (Ruby and Python seem like the big front-runners) but for a simple site you want to upload via FTP and forget I see no reason anyone would want to put much effort into "replacing" PHP.</div>
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<div>On a related note, much of PHP's reputation isn't really deserved in my opinion. There's a lot of awful code out there, but it's eco-system now has a pretty scale-worthy stack (laravel/symfony/ect, php-fpm and nginx) and like any language, it has some
poor design decisions, but for the most part bad code is due to bad programmers rather than the language itself.</div>
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<div>-- </div>
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<div style="font-family: Consolas; font-size: medium; ">Paul Mooring</div>
<div style="font-family: Consolas; font-size: medium; ">Systems Engineer and Customer Advocate</div>
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<div style="font-family: Consolas; font-size: medium; ">www.opscode.com</div>
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<span style="font-weight:bold">From: </span>keith smith <<a href="mailto:klsmith2020@yahoo.com">klsmith2020@yahoo.com</a>><br>
<span style="font-weight:bold">Reply-To: </span>Main PLUG discussion list <<a href="mailto:plug-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org">plug-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org</a>><br>
<span style="font-weight:bold">Date: </span>Friday, April 5, 2013 12:25 PM<br>
<span style="font-weight:bold">To: </span>Main PLUG discussion list <<a href="mailto:plug-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org">plug-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org</a>><br>
<span style="font-weight:bold">Subject: </span>PHP lifespan<br>
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Hi, I do not want to start any flame wars. I would like to open a discussion though.<br>
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I was thinking of what the life span of PHP might be. I have lived through a number of them.<br>
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In the early 80's COBOL was still taught and was in use. I know it is still around, however I do not think anyone would choose COBOL for a new project.
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I also lived through the whole dBase, Clipper, FoxBase+, and Visual FoxPro cycle. FoxPro was acquired by M$ 15 or 18 years ago, which started it's slow decline. M$ finally killed it last year.<br>
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So I am wondering about PHP. What might it's lifespan be? What might be the next big thing... etc.<br>
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I'm interested in hearing your thoughts.<br>
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Keith Smith</td>
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