Meanwhile, clueless overpaid tech millennials will now be without tea, unless someone can quickly get a vc-backed tea app to market.
I last saw one of them gasping that their grandparents used to use teabags.
Parts of East London were always there, but remained in the shadows, underdeveloped and relatively cheaply priced compared to the west and central areas. Everyone waited for others to make the area trendy, they needed someone else to socially validate and approve the area before they then came en-masse. They demanded new expensive bakeries, tweeted their delight with the distressed decor coffee shop, and simply purred about the expensive butcher. Then at some point later, those some people went on to complain the area had become gentrified. One day even the hipsters and shiny people will be priced out, and maybe the area will change again, but the original locals, who had business and family for generations there, were never asked about any of this, and the remaining few still don't have a voice.
If you can get all three of these -- overly complicated bloated stack, NIH compliant newness driven development, and yet another crappy poor UI experience -- then no, it's a loss.
The best thing about COBOL is the distinct lack of hipster coders or frameworks. I worked on various COBOL code bases over the years, and they were always approachable, if a little long-winded.
My cheques still process via COBOL code a friend's grandmother wrote and still runs on emulated Unisys hardware.
Brute forcing an entire language to meet the PC brigades march of the day marks the decendency, rather than ascendency of empires. The east laughs at the west once more.
Isn't it? Should we have allowed the Indians to call on such savage practice as suttee? One of the greater horrors of post colonial sub continent africa is how little education reached the populace and the savage beliefs that perpetuate atrocities even now. Imagine if we had been able to teach them that they didn't need to kill and mutilate albinos for example?