From: Emre Sevinc
Subject: Who earns how much? Lisp is #1 @ Germany
Date: 
Message-ID: <0a047437-514f-461b-9f8b-9d64fe48ef83@h20g2000yqn.googlegroups.com>
An interesting piece of news that one of my colleagues working in
Germany drew my attention to, just before the International Lisp
Conference 2009 begins:

Which programming language has the lion share in Germany (not
considering applications and databases such as Oracle, SAP, etc.)?
According to the German IT magazine CT, Lisp is #1 followed by Java
which is followed by shell programming and then PHP.

The rest of the story, along with some article screenshots are
available at:

http://ileriseviye.org/blog/?p=1856

--
Emre Sevinc
Istanbul Bilgi University

From: Cesar Rabak
Subject: Re: Who earns how much? Lisp is #1 @ Germany
Date: 
Message-ID: <gprfcv$rlo$1@aioe.org>
Emre Sevinc escreveu:
> An interesting piece of news that one of my colleagues working in
> Germany drew my attention to, just before the International Lisp
> Conference 2009 begins:
> 
> Which programming language has the lion share in Germany (not
> considering applications and databases such as Oracle, SAP, etc.)?
> According to the German IT magazine CT, Lisp is #1 followed by Java
> which is followed by shell programming and then PHP.
> 
> The rest of the story, along with some article screenshots are
> available at:
> 
> http://ileriseviye.org/blog/?p=1856

The article shows only averages, but if you consider the number of 
respondents, it's entirely possible that the top decile of Java 
programmers hit the Lisp average, so nothing new here. . .
From: Matthias Buelow
Subject: Re: Who earns how much? Lisp is #1 @ Germany
Date: 
Message-ID: <72chnnFo9k3cU1@mid.dfncis.de>
Emre Sevinc wrote:

> The rest of the story, along with some article screenshots are
> available at:

Hmm... the numbers are unrealistic, there's no C++ anywhere (which
arguably, is the most used still in the industry after Java and PHP,
although I don't think PHP webprogramming is in the same field as C++
application development), and PHP is even listed twice. (?)
Nice to see they haven't decided to dump Lisp from their listing,
though. Quite courageous. ;)