It looks to me like there’s a bit of deadline ignoring going on, but even if it really is at heart reluctance to learn rust, aren’t a lot of linux developers volunteers? Getting cross that a bunch of volunteers don’t want to commit to permanently supporting rust (with its famously steep learning curve and famously hard to please borrow checker) seems a bit entitled to me.
“You there! Volunteers! Get on with doing exactly what I want exactly the way I want it and before you release your next version. Stop resisting the inevitable rise of your new priority: doing things our way. It’s better, so you’re wrong. Quickly now, stop resisting.”
Ah OK, yes. Then “Hey, Intel, Red Hat, Linaro, IBM and 500 other companies and a bunch of other people, You have to make this massive C project rust compliant otherwise you’re tech luddites.” It’s still entitled.
It looks to me like there’s a bit of deadline ignoring going on, but even if it really is at heart reluctance to learn rust, aren’t a lot of linux developers volunteers? Getting cross that a bunch of volunteers don’t want to commit to permanently supporting rust (with its famously steep learning curve and famously hard to please borrow checker) seems a bit entitled to me.
“You there! Volunteers! Get on with doing exactly what I want exactly the way I want it and before you release your next version. Stop resisting the inevitable rise of your new priority: doing things our way. It’s better, so you’re wrong. Quickly now, stop resisting.”
No, the vast majority of linux developers are professionally employed to do it.
Ah OK, yes. Then “Hey, Intel, Red Hat, Linaro, IBM and 500 other companies and a bunch of other people, You have to make this massive C project rust compliant otherwise you’re tech luddites.” It’s still entitled.
What you describe would, indeed, be risible. Fortunately it’s merely histrionic twaddle.