what's wrong with REBOL?
Jeff Epler
jepler at unpythonic.net
Tue Sep 2 18:33:01 EDT 2003
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Tue Sep 2 18:33:01 EDT 2003
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On Tue, Sep 02, 2003 at 09:03:17PM +0000, Christopher Browne wrote: > "What's wrong" is that 'proprietary nature.' If I write code in Perl, > Python, or Ruby, I can be certain that I won't get bitten because of > someone pulling the rug out from under them. > > I can't be certain in the same way of the perpetual availability of > REBOL. Of course, it's also possible that it might become impossible to use "non-proprietary" software. There are legal reasons: Perhaps the software will be found to violate a patent, or infringe copyright. Perhaps it will be judged to violate a DMCA-type law. Perhaps a new "software defects" law will be impossible for free software to conform to (for instance, due to a requirement that the software developer post a bond against damages caused by defects in the software). There are also technical reasons: How many programmer-hours do you think it would take to port X10 (the predecessor to X11) to MacOS X running on Itanium? Or to XBox2? What if the dominant machine/OS combination in the future makes it hard or impossible to run programs written in your chosen language (JVM doesn't support C efficiently, for instance), or uses DRM to keep you from running arbitrary unsigned code (under a system of this type, interpreters like Python would obvously never be Signed) Jeff
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