Good things are afoot in the Rebol community right now, in my opinion. Their adoption of Git + GitHub, if they really go through with it, is the most mainstream move they're making in a long time.
When we have an RSS feed of the Mezzanine checkins and comment on lines in those checkins... it really is a new world.
As the Rebol community is quite small, and I'd know your name probably... perhaps you are just curious about why someone would bother to make a room about this language. It's cool though. :)
Er, hm, wait maybe I should have said @ChristianEnsel
Most of the languages I use are freaky. C++? Jeez, who uses that anymore.
I programmed in Ruby for the first time recently and there was nothing new under the sun, but, at the same time... it wasn't the uphill battle that Rebol is when you want to get something done.
Hm. Well, I have my own programming paradigm shift which I should probably unleash to the world except that I am lately focusing on my move to Maui in Hawaii and surfing and drinking umbrella drinks :)
I feel that. Felt it when I tinkered with Ruby lately. You really get a very different experience, and Rebol is like... this neat machine but you are stabbing yourself in the eye by virtue of using it and it's not a good feeling...
But this recent opening up to GitHub, I dunno, maybe it could trigger an awakening of some kind ?
Well in the past, when Rebol has gotten on a bandwagon (like Twitter) I think Carl has done more damage than good by badmouthing it. So far he's not been dissing git, and I do think there's more core tech in it to the point where he won't go south on it, but you can't ever tell...
He said he liked Chrome for a while, then he reneged...
Well, I do think that "drinking one's own wine" is healthy, but the simple fact is that Rebol has too few developers trying to reimplement every piece of software in the toolchain.
Yes, well, it's part of what's kept Rebol interesting... but you mention multitasking, look at object modifying its spec block: rebol.net/wiki/Talk:Scoping_in_Rebol
The module stuff is a step forward, no doubt, but... multitasking? Rebol has been slipping deadlines and it doesn't have to be that way.
Their model is messaging, run a bunch of Rebol instances, exchange Rebol data, the end.
A serious approach to multi-core, multithread programming would set Rebol 3 back at least another year, because it's just not designed for it.
And they're too timid about changing the slightest thing if it breaks compatibility, for the 10 people who use Rebol, when they should be thinking more about the millions who currently do not...
Most people who use Rebol use R2, and Rebol 3 is basically invisible to them.
The only real feature in R3 that matters to anyone who'd use it is Unicode.
A month ago Microsoft looked pretty dead, whoever's in charge of their PR is doing a good job because they jumped back into relevance somehow against all odds.
Hover over a chat message and note that among things you can do is to star a post, on the right you'll see a list of messages starred by people... click on the link and read that note in context.
Facebook and company are pioneering that, and it's bleeding into systems like this one, and we are running into a few dangerous scenarios regarding reputation-selling (like World of Warcraft gold, etc.)
If people would just pull together and each take on a part of the implementation and work as (gasp) a team... I think a Rebol git would come together quickly.
And the interesting bit would be to compare the byte size of it, and I think git users would be impressed if Rebol just followed through with its design
In the meantime, look at how fun it is to be in all these other communities. This StackOverflow chat site, sure is nice... but... uh, AltME? Seriously?
The AltME thing comes from people who want a full Rebol stack, Qtask and StackOverflow and whoever else say "we don't care, send it to an iPhone" which is even more pragmatic than I.
SafeWorlds is as I understand it a joint venture and the story is more complicated if you know the peeps involved.
Well the market is persnickety. $10 MSRP difference can make a big difference, you have to have the right product at the right time at the right price with the right network.
I'm disappointed at what the market has chosen, but at the same time, we are seeing certain kinds of evolution.