Should I learn Rust?

I’m learning Rust. Why?

Yerachmiel Feltzman
Israeli Tech Radar

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Point made: learning different approaches, their features, and constraints opens up your mind.

Disclaimer: This blog post is a personal, subjective testimony of my motives to learn Rust, and as such YMMV. 😃

In this blog post you will find:

  1. Why curiosity is a problem.
  2. How the 90–25 principle differs from Pareto’s 80–20 rule.
  3. Why you and I should learn a new programing language.
  4. The goals I want to achieve by learning Rust.
Photo by Susan Q Yin on Unsplash

I’m a self-taught software engineer with a focus on data. 💻

I work at Tikal — a company composed of tech experts, where we provide hands-on consultancy, scaling R&D teams with cutting-edge technologies.

In my “past professional life,” I worked in finance. Investment banking, equity research, financial modeling and valuation, corporate finance, and management strategy... All this was part of my vocabulary jargon suitcase. As such, I was well aware of the 80–20 Pareto principle, since it was observed by an economist — Vilfredo Pareto — and coined by a management consultant — Joseph Moses Juran.

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