money.com's laurie segall caught up with one of its founders. >> coding is going to be the literacy ofntury. the same way there are architects and construction workers, you'll need a lot of construction workers who are sort of making software real as opposed to designing the software. so i think you know, you'll need a lot more of those in the future as everything moves towards software and the web and mobile. >> and writing code isn't just for the zuckerbergs of the world, let's bring our panel back in. lz, is the new, i don't know, new chinese? in the '80s, everyone wanted their kids to learn japanese and they didn't need that in the end. and then they said chinese. maybe now it's code. >> absolutely not. i'm actually offended by that very question. and i tell you why. you know, we're getting so close to the point at which college is becoming a job-creating factory and we're forgetting about the liberal arts aspect and the purpose is also to be an educated person. when i think of languages such as french and italian and spanish, i'm thinking of languages that also incorporate cuisine