On Sunday, 12-March-2006 at 13:52:45 Nick Antonaccio wrote,

>Beyond that, I hope RT really works at marketing.  A bigger community means a
>more productive and capable language via more third party tools.  That's 
>where
>Rebol's really lacking.  No one uses it.  Carl and many of the Rebol gurus 
>are
>design geniuses - my sense is that they should devote more of their energy 
>and
>vision to promoting the superior design of Rebol, and making it commercially
>acceptable to use it!  Success in that area would be success for everyone
>involved :)

I agree.  A re-write of REBOL to add new features would be nice if it's a 
success, but I see no reason to suspect it will be, given the amount of 
unfinished REBOL stuff that's about.  The Mac View version is still "pending" 
on their website, though in alpha or beta if you look deeply.  And REBOL 
Services?  It's still in alpha or beta too I believe, as is Rebcode.  And the 
REBOL plugin is still only on IE.

I'm worried that while they're trying to make REBOL perfect, the world's 
leaving them far behind.

I wasn't going to comment on this thread, but then I read this from Dave 
Winer... 

http://www.scripting.com/2006/03/13.html#whyIWillStopBlogging

---8<---

When I started blogging, depending on how you look at it, either in 1994, 1996 
or 1997, I had different goals, and happily the goals have been accomplished. 
Billions of Websites now no longer seems an outrageously ambitious goal. We're 
pretty close to a billion, I suspect. The goal was also to create tools that 
would make it easy for everyone to have a site, and then more specifically a 
chronological one. That's done.

I wanted programming to turn upside down, to have the Internet be the platform 
instead of Microsoft and Apple. That worked too. APIs on web apps are now 
commonplace, and a basis for comparison between offerings. While user 
interfaces have gotten better, of course, there's been a steady flow of new 
ideas in how my work connects with yours, and vice versa, and we're doing it 
without a platform vendor controlling it. 

---8<---

That second paragraph's the important one.  REBOL should be part of it and 
would be way better than the horrible mix of stuff used to put an AJAX site 
together.  It isn't though, and I don't see how improving the core language 
will make it so.  At the stage it is now, it needs two (or perhaps three) 
things done:  To have the plugin available for all major browsers and platforms 
and for it to be promoted!  (The third thing is going fully open-source, but 
I'm unsure of just how much difference that would make.)

REBOL's promotion now is all "come to me".  "Join AltME" instead of "plug this 
into your existing website".  Carl has a blog, but there's no public commenting 
allowed, so no conversation takes place around it.  You can just leave a 
message, which no one except those at RT will see.  The traffic's all going the 
wrong way, a black hole instead of a sun.

Hee, and to prove my point, I've just searched Technorati.  Just one REBOL hit 
in the last three days, and this is it...

"I just killed a couple of days reading Stevey's Drunken Blog Rants, which is a 
fascinating account of a talented engineer spending a year searching for better 
languages, and finding Lisp in the end. Lots of interesting insights -- I found 
his essays on practicing programming and math every day to be particularly 
inspiring, since I've already found Lisp, and Ruby, and OCaml, and Erlang, and 
pretty much all of the other languages that are mentioned. Except Rebol. That 
one was new."

And having posted this, how do I link to it on the net if I want to point 
someone else to it?  Wait until it appears in the mailing-list archive, right?  
Trouble is, that doesn't happen instantly - and sometimes not for a day or 
more.  Which is usually after you've moved on to something else.  Which is no 
way to promote anything.

Umm - rant over. :-)

-- Carl Read.


 
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