The end-to-reified-unsets is so far shaping up to be a very good thing.
If it's a pick/select difference, then the thing about the select-like accesses is this question about maps, and if map/key should give back NONE! by default if the key is not there, and :map/key "be void"
I'll encourage now the term of unset vs. set to be applied to variables in contexts, with saying some evaluations are "void"
While not saying there's any such thing as a "void value" because there's no VOID! type
So sentences like "there's no result" vs. "the result is an unset"
Maybe TO-VALUE is just too long a name for what it does
The question is whether to-value :foo/what/ever is too burdensome for the casual user who generally doesn't care about the distinction between "not present" and "present but empty", so they'd rather just write foo/what/ever and not get an error or be able to tell the difference.
It could be that get 'foo/what/ever by default collapses the two together, and you have to say get/opt 'foo/what/ever for an equivalent to :foo/what/ever.
@Adrian Well, maybe yes. I think that only works with Ren/C branch, thanks to @HostileFork that has fixed alignment issue. Also, mostly untested and buggy (as @noein pointed out).