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sixminuteabs

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sixminuteabs
·hace 4 años·discuss
Recession and layoffs are slightly different. I view the more proximate cause of layoffs etc is the increase in the cost of capital and more of a feeling that there might be a slowdown. Company execs, boards and investors had a different denominator in their projections about present value of cash flows in Q4 of last year (this is always an approx calc in practice, but the mechanics / views follow the equations) and now investments that might have made sense may not. People are calculating the risks of recession differently. All of this is idiosyncratic to each company. Some companies may be operating in a domain where it makes sense to invest or for larger companies based on their estimations, and in large companies you may have some bets that make sense to expand and others that should shrink.
sixminuteabs
·hace 4 años·discuss
I agree with a lot of the criticism in the article, but also agree with this idea that Scala is in the best position it has ever been. Core Scala is migrating to Scala3 (will take a few years) and the scala team had the courage to take on the rough edges. The Typelevel community (FP side) has a whole ecosystem which is maturing into something really nice. Akka pulled the ripcord on licensing so everyone knows where they stand.

Across the board the language and environment is stabilizing. Most of the (correct) criticisms expressed in this article are either 1. An expression that dependency management remains really hard as dependencies and ecosystems grow 2. An artifact of the fact that early scala projects relied heavily on borrowing from java to bootstrap and it caused a snarl of dependencies. On the latter, I see a decline in snarl overtime.

It is fair to say that Rust and Go have a really awesome toolchain experience and are setting the standard (though I wonder if the problems of being "old" and having boatloads of libraries haven't yet set in). SBT nominally has a similar experience but it's definitely slower and somehow less intuitive. Hoping to see more work in this area and I think Mill + SBT "competing" + BSP and bloop opening the door for more innovation will allow for quick progress.
sixminuteabs
·hace 4 años·discuss
We're US only for now.
sixminuteabs
·hace 4 años·discuss
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