Wholeheartedly agree with the sentiment but if Web Components aren't relevant tech in ten years I'll eat my shorts. I'm also throwing in a vote for Rust.
In all fairness I hedged my bets - I do not own shorts.
My 3rd "expect to see a lot of" is C++11, and I can't think of a single tech I know that will be fully obsolete in 10 years. Legacy code endures. You could probably snag a COBOL gig in 2028.
Wholeheartedly agree with the sentiment but if Web Components aren't relevant tech in ten years I'll eat my shorts. I'm also throwing in a vote for Rust.
Ah ah ah see you in 10 :D (I secretly hope they will be as well)
So, Web Components, Rust and... we need a third one.
What instead would you like to disappear from "the face of the tech earth"?
In all fairness I hedged my bets - I do not own shorts.
My 3rd "expect to see a lot of" is C++11, and I can't think of a single tech I know that will be fully obsolete in 10 years. Legacy code endures. You could probably snag a COBOL gig in 2028.
Just don't buy any shorts within the next decade and you'll be safe.
I would really love to see Rust overcome C in the next ten years, especially in embedded programming
Looks very promising