(So hopefully the dean got a better haircut since. In any case, he's handing me a certificate which says 'Brian is awesome and I'm not worthy to be in his presence'. The print is kind of hard to make out in that photo.)
@Freezerburn Well you're certainly in the unsupported territory I think, but if you find the patches to make it work, I'm sure it will be appreciated... but check the Atronix repo first
What's going to happen, I'm sorry to announce to everyone, is that Ren/C will be the only build that will work with Ren Garden... at least until my patches get taken...
I played nice at first because I didn't have a better answer. Now I have one.
But Shixin says he's willing and ready to believe.
1. deliberately as first item: i fully support the Ren/C effort and hope that i'll be able to contribute what time i have. i sincerely think that this is the best chance to, collaboratively, move this thing forward. i very much appreciate the effort and work you've invested into this so far, @HostileFork.
If the two of them are on board, we have a shot here.
e.g. rebolsource and zsx/r3 might well pull the ren-c patches
@HostileFork I just talked to Carl. He said he gave the rebol/rebol github keys to Andreas. And also he thinks that @kealist has admin control. He told me he gave Andreas permission to handle the administration of admin privileges. :-)
Though again: I don't like building things in a non-native way on an OS (including Windows). Things should use whatever the OS defines as the native way to do something, even if that means not using the "true unix way"(TM)
(though I'm slightly hyprocritical, since I use cygwin instead of learning powershell properly)
@Freezerburn Rebol is crazy and we want to keep it on all the fringe systems... I agree. It's a carefully considered tool which is supposed to be just one unified executable. The "wall of binaries" as I call it.
The turnkey, zero dependency, we build on your system is the reason for existence. So all these angles should be studied.
I somehow ended up with that philosophy as some kind of core of what I look for in libraries/programming languages. If it doesn't say it works on Linux/OS X/Windows, at least, I generally don't look at it
@HostileFork Insane? Maybe. But the better way to be
@HostileFork I prefer not to call it insanity. Instead I like the term "challenging". It's not insane to try and be cross-platform, but it could be challenging to get the APIs correct across the platforms and have a coherent set of abstractions that let the rest of the code not care about those API differences.
@HostileFork Yes, thank you for the kind thoughts. Just been a bit overloaded these days and don't have much time on an actual computer to read through stuff
@kealist Well my point is that I get in all kinds of arguments, it's what I do, and I can rail against people like Kaj who are genuinely unpleasant. But that remark was uncalled for. I so take it back.
I feel at times I lose my compass, and the world turns to noise.
I find the right people forgive quickly, adapt fast, move the future forward. The wrong people can't do that. It's the difference between right and wrong.
So I need to kill every instinct I have putting me in the wrong.