* commercializing ocaml
@ 2000-09-06 20:31 miles
2000-09-14 16:47 ` Xavier Leroy
0 siblings, 1 reply; 2+ messages in thread
From: miles @ 2000-09-06 20:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
I've been eagerly following the success of Bluetail and Erlang and wondering if
something similar might be possible with OCaml. The model seems simple:
assemble a small team of first-class programmers and take advantage of the
productivty gains afforded by a good functional language to compete on quality,
performance, and time to market.
For example, I see potential opportunities in the emerging ASP/hosted
application market, where most interfaces are simple network text or XML
protocols and fpl's advantages in dealing with complex logic could be critical.
Has anyone considered such a venture? Perhaps the folks at INRIA?
(sorry, my French isn't up to the translation)
--
miles at caddr dot com
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread
* Re: commercializing ocaml
2000-09-06 20:31 commercializing ocaml miles
@ 2000-09-14 16:47 ` Xavier Leroy
0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Xavier Leroy @ 2000-09-14 16:47 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: miles, caml-list
> I've been eagerly following the success of Bluetail and Erlang and
> wondering if something similar might be possible with OCaml. The
> model seems simple: assemble a small team of first-class programmers
> and take advantage of the productivty gains afforded by a good
> functional language to compete on quality, performance, and time to
> market.
I did not reply immediately to your message, because I hoped members
of this list with more experience in start-up companies would comment.
The main issue, in my opinion, is to have a suitable application area
to target. You simply can't sell a new language alone, even with a
good implementation. Several companies were created in the '80s and
'90s to sell functional or logic languages and implementations, and I
think all of them went down.
The remarkable success of Bluetail is mainly due to them being experts
in a hot domain (telecom software). The additional productivity and
reliability brought by Erlang over more conventional languages helped
them a lot, of course, but Erlang by itself would not have allowed
them to make such a big hit.
> For example, I see potential opportunities in the emerging
> ASP/hosted application market, where most interfaces are simple
> network text or XML protocols and fpl's advantages in dealing with
> complex logic could be critical.
That's one possibility -- although you should not disclose your
business plans on a mailing list :-)
> Has anyone considered such a venture? Perhaps the folks at INRIA?
We didn't, really, by lack of a hot application area.
- Xavier Leroy
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