perhaps the term is an oxymoron. from my (admittedly limited) experience, `executive-level' folks don't have much interest or even experience in getting the job done (and no - visions and sales promises don't run on servers, as much as we'd like to hope; code, as flawed as it often is, does)
take javascript - it's more powerful (as a `core' language) than java (it lets you write code at runtime). now go look for job openings which require js. how many LISP openings out there?
perhaps the term is an oxymoron. from my (admittedly limited) experience, `executive-level' folks don't have much interest or even experience in getting the job done (and no - visions and sales promises don't run on servers, as much as we'd like to hope; code, as flawed as it often is, does)
take javascript - it's more powerful (as a `core' language) than java (it lets you write code at runtime). now go look for job openings which require js. how many LISP openings out there?