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<node id="202714" title="Re: Loyalty, Personal gain or Professional Integrity" created="2002-10-04 07:48:00" updated="2005-03-26 01:53:49">
<type id="11">
note</type>
<author id="131262">
Steve_p</author>
<data>
<field name="doctext">
&lt;p&gt;You should not see this as a betrayal.  A programming language is not a person, so it cannot be betrayed.  As long as your project will not be harmed by doing the work in Java, I don't see anything wrong with recommending it.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;There are a lot of people out there who practically become married to technologies that it becomes there own downfall.  Look at the mainframe or VB programmers out there.  Where I live, employers typically receive 200 to 300 resumes for positions for the mainframe and VB.  Considering how competetative the job market is right now, I think its a good thing to broaden your skills.  Who knows, maybe you'll find something in Java that helps you to improve your Perl skills.&lt;/p&gt;</field>
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202711</field>
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202711</field>
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