ofcourse. C++ is the most complete language. I think only 2 things are lacking as of now: 1. Extensive libraries to do stuff in easier way (like python). 2. Smart enough programmers to comprehend the syntax of C++
I've used Conan and it helped a whole lot last year to build a project that had around 100 dependencies, but even with it it was still a full job to maintain the dependencies
I think a more realistic theory is that this virus is man made but leaked accidentally.
What the origin of Ebola, SARS and AIDS? Did they suddenly emerge? Did they evolve from other streams of viruses? Or have people been dying from them for years, but no body knew.
I'm even considering writing our own Conan packages. For example the public Conan package for the boost library requires so many options in our conan file. If I wrote my own Conan package and stored it on our own company server, then I could make it use the defaults settings that most of our projects need (multithreaded, static linking, ...). So our project's conan files wouldn't need to be cluttered with options.
You want to be able to have a mostly reproducible environment across dev machines, so you probably want to look into lockfiles and revisions to avoid package updates or recipe updates breaking things on a daily basis
I introduced custom recipes when the ones from Conan Center had issues I couldn't trivially solve and contribute directly to CCI
Basically Conan is still evolving fast, and so are library recipes. While such recipe updates are generally good, welcome and non-breaking, the bigger your library stack, the bigger the changes of random breakages
So you can enable revisions to point to specific recipe versions you know work for you
Lockfiles are to fix package versions (maybe not revisions) so that a conan install doesn't try to update the libraries it doesn't need to update, but uses the versions from the lockfile instead