References

  1. Joe Armstrong (2003): Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors. The Royal Institute of Technology Stockholm, Sweden.
  2. Joe Armstrong (2007): A history of Erlang. In: Proceedings of the third ACM SIGPLAN conference on History of programming languages. ACM, pp. 6–1, doi:10.1145/1238844.1238850.
  3. FutureLearn (2017): FutureLearn Partners. https://partners.futurelearn.com. Accessed: 2017-05-13.
  4. Philip Guo (2014): Python is Now the Most Popular Introductory Teaching Language at Top U.S. Universities. https://cacm.acm.org/blogs/blog-cacm/176450-python-is-now-the-most-popular-introductory-teaching-language-at-top-u-s-universities/fulltext. Accessed: 2017-05-13.
  5. Fred Hebert (2013): Learn You Some Erlang for Great Good!: A Beginner's Guide. No Starch Press, San Francisco, CA, USA.
  6. Ellen Murphy, Tom Crick & James H Davenport (2017): An Analysis of Introductory Programming Courses at UK Universities, doi:10.22152/programming-journal.org/2017/1/18.
  7. Tom Simonite (2016): Moore's Law Is Dead. Now What?. https://www.technologyreview.com/s/601441/moores-law-is-dead-now-what/. Accessed: 2017-05-13.
  8. Ericsson OTP Team (2017): Erlang. http://www.erlang.org. Accessed: 2017-05-13.
  9. TIOBE: TIOBE Index for May 2017. https://www.tiobe.com/tiobe-index/.

Comments and questions to: eptcs@eptcs.org
For website issues: webmaster@eptcs.org