Digital Mark πŸ•ΉπŸ‘ΎπŸ₯ƒ is a user on cybre.space. You can follow them or interact with them if you have an account anywhere in the fediverse.

the 3 stages of me discovering a new tech:
- anti-hype: ew it's new must be bad
- engagement: oh so actually cool I'll use it for everything
- desillusion: ew I'm disappointed I was right it's shit
- acceptance: oh it's actually good when used properly

Now I like Go and Docker. It took some time, mostly for me to know why I should hate some examples and appreciate its few good uses.

Some are still mostly hated, like Node. (which I just can't really like when there's Go for instance)
Some I always liked, like Rust (which didn't really have this hype phase I felt a need to oppose, it's just slowly getting better)

Node... I just feel like it's a bad language and a bad ecosystem. And we took that bad base and pushed it hard enough to work in production for some reason and now it's mildly working and it's just sad we spent all this effort there.
Just imagine what we could have now if all that work and resource were put into... Rust?

Probably a very unpopular opinion, but I don't like the fact that there are so many languages and frameworks. It's extremely suboptimal. Diversity is great but we surely could profit from having less redundancy.
Is there anything good coming from having Ruby/Python/Perl/JS? They are overlapping on most point and solving the same problems in the same ways. We could reasonably just keep one or two.

Digital Mark πŸ•ΉπŸ‘ΎπŸ₯ƒ @mdhughes

.@CobaltVelvet No two people will agree on which are good. I'd keep Python and JS/Node.
Python's elegant, fairly fast, and perfect for solving logic/statistics problems.
JS is the language of the web on front and back, and Dylan/self-style objects are awesome.
Perl's an obsolete hack of awk, forget it.
Ruby's an abomination, all the elegance of Perl with the speed of BASIC.

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