9:18 AM
@GrahamChiu - some time ago I wrote a short acticle, called - What makes a good beta. You repeat question, which Carl was asking too. So for me, it is a mixture of various things ...
My take is, that each thing has its momentum - the window of oportunity. R3 was way too long in development, and while updating on some features, it also was a step back. Until R3 got open-source, it lacked a friendly concole (gee, even multiline was missing), it lacked networking protocols, DB protocols and the GUI was mostly experimental. It also lacked a simple DLL interface, while providing more sophisticated extensions ... Well, and CGI and related stuff ....
So, the thing was, that most recent (back at that time) R2 users had no reason to switch to R3, unless they were willing to miss some significant feature.
So - after R3 got released, many things got better - FFI (DLL interface), some networking protocols, fixed console ...
But also - situation got more complicated - various distros to follow. Saphir mostly stopped R3-GUI development (well, at least I think there is not active development anymore), Atronix has its own UI, @HostileFork does a bit different things at the language level and if his work would have GUI, it would be most probably Qt. His Ren Garden console was much more, that what R3 ever offered
The advantage of Red is (so far, as noone forked it), that you mostly follow just one stream of development, you know the roadmap ahead, you can see almost daily commits, etc., but most importantly - Red, even with its 0.x release, is delivering some smooth user experience, e.g. View based console.
Today for e.g., Visual Studio Code editor support appeared, just look into the Twitter message ...