Thankfully I dont think thats too true, I am one of the ops lurking in
##asm on freenode
we get noobs most weeks/days trying to do stuff. I still do embedded
now and again
Dave Caroline
On Sat, Apr 16, 2011 at 8:41 PM, Chuck Guzis <cclist at sydex.com> wrote:
  I've lost the original thread on this, but ISTR
that the subject
 thread wasn't terribly relevant.
 I was thinking about Fred's statement quoting the business about
 "nobody programs today, nor ever will program" in assembly again.
 To a certain extent, save for a few exceptions (embedded, low-cost
 devices, special purpose-built hardware, etc.) I think it's probably
 true.
 Consider: ?When was the last HP-16C calculator sold? ?Why did HP quit
 selling it, but still sells the HP-12C financial calculator to this
 day? ?It would seem that if there were really a market, the 12C
 chassis could be reprogrammed to continue the 16C line. ?But it's not-
 -because few need to sit over a dump and work out what went wrong.
 Because nobody works at that level any longer; it would not be a
 profitable product for HP.
 I can remember when our department at work got ONE TI SR-22
 calculator and how much easier it made calculating those 48-bit
 addresses and converting between bit, byte, halfword and word
 addresses.
 As much as I hate to admit it, the quote from Fred is probably closer
 to the truth than I'd care to admit.
 FWIW, I use my 16C practically every day. ?But I'm old.
 --Chuck