Yes I agree - when there is so much discussion and debate going on, its easy to 
lose sight of the hard work and determination that went into getting us to this 
brave new world. I too want to shout a big thank you for the tooling and also 
the support that goes along with that.

I love been able to think a bit more polyglot, and use tools/languages more 
easily side by side - although of course I want to hold on to what makes 
Smalltalk special (which is tons of stuff).

I particularly love being able to feel like its easier to contribute - updating 
readme’s and docs is trivial in a web browser now - just correct them and 
submit a PR. And on the receiving side - GitHub makes it easy to discuss the 
fix, alter it, or simply approve it. Equally - modern build tools easily detect 
the change, pull the code and rebuild and package it (and cheap scalable 
infrastructure).

Its also getting easier and easier to submit code fixes too - and the VCS 
skills you learn doing this are transferable beyond Smalltalk - so its a big 
win win.

So yes guys - thanks for hanging in for us!

Tim

> On 19 Feb 2019, at 08:50, Sven Van Caekenberghe <s...@stfx.eu> wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> 
> This is a thank you note about Iceberg.
> 
> I have been moving all my external and internal Pharo code to git/tonel/7 and 
> on multiple occasions I have been pleasantly surprised about the 
> functionality and performance of Iceberg. Basically, it just works.
> 
> Finally, Pharo code lives in standard open source and commercial repositories 
> (git, GitHub, Bitbucket, ...), without losing anything.
> 
> I know that it took years to get here and that lots of code and community 
> battles had to be fought. So thank you, to the whole team, you did a great 
> job !
> 
> Sven
> 
> --
> Sven Van Caekenberghe
> Proudly supporting Pharo
> http://pharo.org
> http://association.pharo.org
> http://consortium.pharo.org
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 


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