Did that remark come across as a criticism? I did not mean it so; distributing the power of programming as broadly as possible has always been a central value in my career, and that's why I joined the VB team in the first place. I meant that while it made sense for cutting-edge language development to happen elsewhere, I had thought that VB would have been a great place for work on improved human factors. How can we design the interfaces for this complex system so that people who do not yet have (and may never gain) a strong mental model of its architecture will nevertheless be able to improvise their way to success? That's where I thought the value of VB was.
> while it made sense for cutting-edge language development to happen elsewhere, I had thought that VB would have been a great place for work on improved human factors.
Thanks for clarifying, this makes sense to me and it's unfortunate you didn't get to see this through to fruition