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>LOL
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>Good question. Judging by what happens to prices related to languages such as COBOL, I would expect a different effect ;-)
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>Which is probably also good news for those of us who choose to remain in VFP in some capacity. A few years down the road, VFP skills may be hard to get by and thus make some people good money. We already see that today at EPS, where we are always (right now for instance) looking for VFP people (although we always need VFP and .NET skills). Good VFP people are hard to find...
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>Markus
Markus IMO is more good developers is hard to find, if your good then the language you develop is just a question od semantic.
Alexandre Palma
Senior Application Architect