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You're assuming your conclusion. Obviously, a product that dramatically simplified programming to the point where anyone (or "Bob") could do most of what they need, would be valuable. The question is whether these products really do that, or merely appear to.


>Obviously, a product that dramatically simplified programming to the point where anyone (or "Bob") could do most of what they need, would be valuable.

You are attacking a strawman :) My claim pointed out specific types of problems that are solved by workflow software, and solved in substance, not in form.


My claim pointed out specific types of problems that are solved by workflow software

It did? I wonder how I read it ten times and missed that. "Distributed systems" doesn't seem like a very "specific type of problem" to me.


>supports a range of databases, web service integration, long running processes, asynchronous invocation

those are specific examples of problems that a workflow product would address and consequently a programmer wouldn't need to spend time on building from scratch.


That's not a list of problems, it's a list of buzzwords.

Edit: nor is it specific. The class of programs encompassing those things is enormous.


>>The class of programs encompassing those things is enormous.

Heh. Welcome to the real world.

If you'd like to call them buzzwords, I don't care, it is your prerogative. They are what they are. People who have done workflow software know what they mean. If you were to spend some time on Google you'd get a sense of the meaning too.




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