Exodus in a sentence as a noun

After the riots, the rate of exodus from Detroit rose from 20,000 a year to 80,000 a year.

[1] Law firms face a more extreme version of the "talent exodus" problem that plagues tech companies.

There WAS a company that does that, it was mentioned here on HN during the great GoDaddy exodus, but I cannot recall which.

Even the title is ridiculous unless you are willing to define "exodus" as "growing at the same pace as the nation as a whole".

More so, being able to work with more talented devs is a big perk for other devs, which will tend to accelerate the exodus at all levels.

Or many they hire someone who, in short order, irritates all of the other employees such that there is a huge morale crash and exodus.

When there is that much money involved, and a possible exodus of Wallgreens and Amazon away from Adwords, I am not completely buying it. Google would be stupid to allow that to occur.

Are these moves just going to stave a potential exodus of .Net developers or will it actually lead to new developers picking up the language?

In the past year we've seen professionals flock to instagram to help promote their craft - with the new language I'd imagine you'll see a mass exodus from those folks pretty quickly.

> Are these moves just going to stave a potential exodus of .Net developers or will it actually lead to new developers picking up the language?I definitely think these changes will keep existing .NET developers in the fold.

Yes, I will forever miss Carol Doda, the go-go "swing joints," the disco clubs, the Mitchell brothers, the Pavarotti operas where the star never showed up, the old SP trains with their smoking cars where you couldn't take a breath without choking, the no-growth mindset that caused the City to turns its collective nose up as the tech boom began and to wave to it as it passed by, the exodus of businesses that fled high taxes and silly regulations in favor of friendlier climes, and, of course, Playland, where you could ride bumper cars to your heart's content without having to consider anything more serious than how to find the sun amidst the continual fog that hung over the place.

Exodus definitions

noun

a journey by a large group to escape from a hostile environment

See also: hegira hejira

noun

the second book of the Old Testament: tells of the departure of the Israelites out of slavery in Egypt led by Moses; God gave them the Ten Commandments and the rest of Mosaic law on Mount Sinai during the Exodus

See also: Exodus