

How will we stave off ecosystem takeover if not by taking its early signs seriously? At the start of every case of “Stallman Was Right” was a lot of presumption that, in the eyes of many, did not make a solid conclusion.
How will we stave off ecosystem takeover if not by taking its early signs seriously? At the start of every case of “Stallman Was Right” was a lot of presumption that, in the eyes of many, did not make a solid conclusion.
Agree on everything. (As for the off-putting statements about ‘Rust people’: Since the article was published on March 19, I wonder if much of it, revolving around what the author saw as indications of authoritarianism, came from heavy disquiet in the face of authoritarianism’s recent gaining hold of the White house. I’d even consider it likely that people who post on Techrights have an above-average sensitivity for this kind of thing. It could be that the author has since arrived at a more differentiated and just view. Of note, since the time of his writing, the Rust project did remedy things that he criticized about their website.)
We’ve been warned. (And unsurprisingly, Roy Schestowitz is being bomarbed by Microsofters with a chain of SLAPP suits.)
It isn’t a question of “How long are they supposed to support it for”; it’s a matter of “Don’t artificially break things”.
As to Linux distro EOLs, they’re are bad examples for several reasons:
“The only requirement is that you share your progress and log your hours.” So participants are free to choose how they log their hours?
"(…) Dr. Stallman notes that he cannot comment much about technical aspects of Rust, but he remains concerned (for a year already) about the trademark aspects. He is still receiving no clarification or assurances on the matter. Previously he suggested forking it and calling it something like “crust” (in a talk or a session he did with several Brazilian hackers). " (via)