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- Path: netaxis.com!davinci!jradigan
- From: jradigan@davinci (john p radigan)
- Newsgroups: comp.lang.c++,comp.lang.c
- Subject: Re: Beware of "C" Hackers -- A rebuttal to Bertrand Meyer
- Followup-To: comp.lang.c++,comp.lang.c
- Date: 21 Mar 1996 12:30:05 GMT
- Organization: NetAxis - Your link to the Internet!
- Message-ID: <4iri4d$4o5@henry.netaxis.com>
- References: <1995Jul3.034108.4193@rcmcon.com> <4ijl63$nd@solutions.solon.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: davinci.netaxis.com
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.2 PL2]
-
- Peter Seebach (seebs@solutions.solon.com) wrote:
- : In article <4iik8r$asg@henry.netaxis.com>,
- : john p radigan <jradigan@davinci> wrote:
- :>Times change, even "aspirin" was a trademarked term once. Might as well face
- :>it and give up the ghost, the original usage of "hacker" is essentially a
- :>deprecated term today.
-
- : It's not deprecated until a standard mentions it as obsolescent. :)
-
- Touche...
-
- : I don't think we should give up on that one; incompetents and fools should
- : not be allowed to claim honorifics for themselves, and corrupt them. Look
- : what's happened to politics... :)
-
- As much as I agree with you about trying to preserve it's usage, the problem
- is that it goes far beyond the twits who've misappropriated the term. The
- media has done far more damage because the layman now hears it in a purely
- derogatory light.
-
- : It's not like it's hard to use the word correctly, and it's proper respect
- : for the elders that gave us the tools we have today.
-
- *Within* our circle, I agree. And, I've certainly done my share of trying to
- correct misuage when I hear it. But, lately, I've given up to the fact that
- it's becoming a fruitless exercise.
-
- : I mean, who can honestly claim Knuth *isn't* a hacker, in the traditional
- : sense?
-
- Heh, I'm sure you read his recent interview, he'd prefer "computer scientist",
- I'm sure of it! ;-)
-
- -jack-
-