▲ | janpio 7 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The article has a section about something that might be related: https://joel.drapper.me/p/rubygems-takeover/#rv | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | bhouston 7 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Quote: > In his blog post, André says, “For the last ten years or so of working on Bundler, I’ve had a wish rattling around: I want a better dependency manager. It doesn’t just manage your gems, it manages your ruby versions, too. It doesn’t just manage your ruby versions, it installs pre-compiled rubies so you don’t have to wait for ruby to compile from source every time. And more than all of that, it makes it completely trivial to run any script or tool written in ruby, even if that script or tool needs a different ruby than your application does.” > Bluesky threads reveal that Rafael França (Shopify / Rails Core) saw this tool as a threat, saying “some of the “admins” even announced publicly many days ago they were launching a competitor tool [rv] and were funding raising for it. I’d not trust the system to such “admin”.” So a dev was innovating to make better tool to meet their needs (which is what most open source maintainers are generally doing all day), and then some guys immediately jumped to the possibility that they would then actively sabotage RubyGems? Whoa, that is insane. Trying to kill innovation and a start-up out of fear doesn't sound like Shopify's branding in the media. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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