I guess RAD tools (now no-code) will never fade away from the market.
I bet you're getting a lot of traction on corporations that need to upgrade/replace internal tools.
I know, internal tools will always suck because:
1) your market changes faster than you can change your apps, so you're always lagging behind.
2) And technology moves faster than you can keep them to date. That's the reason we still have IE as corporate browser in most enterprises.
Also, 3) nowadays it's very hard to do both good frontend AND backend coding. Technologies diverged a lot since, say, Rails 2.0 (which is just 8 years away from now). And the barrier to compete is higher every day.
I bet you're getting a lot of traction on corporations that need to upgrade/replace internal tools.
I know, internal tools will always suck because:
1) your market changes faster than you can change your apps, so you're always lagging behind.
2) And technology moves faster than you can keep them to date. That's the reason we still have IE as corporate browser in most enterprises.
Also, 3) nowadays it's very hard to do both good frontend AND backend coding. Technologies diverged a lot since, say, Rails 2.0 (which is just 8 years away from now). And the barrier to compete is higher every day.