10:03 PM
That build is complex because it is cross-compiled, and again, that's something Andreas set up that not many people want to maintain.
So it's a major liability to even try and keep it going.
But, it's educational in the sense of "lowest common denominator" building; it keeps the Amish cred going.
But if I had to collapse it down to the one build I am interested in right now, it's Wasm. That's the relevant one.
So I think the fact we can do that via Travis and do an asyncify and threaded build, and have it come up through the loader, is our most significant accomplishment
Really, that's ahead of the curve, and the rest is... nice, but a distraction.
There's like six people who care right now, and I'd like those six people to be capable of doing their own builds...and I do not want desktop end-user customers. As per Tim Ferris, sometimes you have to fire your customers.
It's the web customers we want.
Red can have the classical Rebol desktop market and serve those people, I'm totally cool with that now.
If someone can't build or help build what we've got, and wants a desktop deliverable, do not pass go and go deal with Red. Let them give you what you need. If they ever can.
Even that seems to be in question.
"Can Red take a decade to make a 32-bit Rebol2 equivalent that has TLS 1.2?" => Jury is still out on this.
Also, Apple killed off 32-bit. What now?
@GrahamChiu Anyway, I guess my point is, please focus. If you need something then speak to your need, narrowly. The web build is the only external facing build in which I have interest at this point, the rest is for developers who are handy with a C compiler only.
A couple of Windows builds are failing due to a TCC dependency that has been introduced into pthreads which should not be necessary; I would guess I can probably fix it by tweaking some build setting to say "no C99 threads please". But that will take a day to look into.