I've been working my arse off to try to bring people together for a few days of friendly collaboration, which I do for love, not for profit, as many other conference organizers do. @jdegoes was there, he enhanced the conference with his presence, and everyone had a good time. /16
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Despite this, the Scala community has developed a bad reputation for "drama". That's a reputation which
@typelevel are well aware of, and which has been hugely damaging to the language: orders of magnitude more damaging than@jdegoes, before you even count his contributions. /173 replies 10 retweets 98 likesShow this thread -
And yesterday's action against
@jdegoes knowingly stokes this fire because a handful (and it is just a handful; not speculative hordes) of people can't work with@jdegoes. The action is divisive, selfish, and it's entirely predictable that few positives will come from it. /181 reply 3 retweets 69 likesShow this thread -
Like me,
@jdegoes earns a living through Scala. He's not going to "disappear" overnight, or stop his self-promotion any more than@lightbend are, because we all rely on it to be profitable, and anyone can see this. /191 reply 3 retweets 54 likesShow this thread -
Scala is approaching an exciting but challenging period of change. We're about to get a whole host of new features which will enable us to write smarter, more elegant, more expressive code. We're at the forefront of technology, and it's going to be usable in Scala 3 soon. /20
1 reply 3 retweets 56 likesShow this thread -
And yet, after these two coincidental actions against
@jdegoes in as many days, for the first time in over a decade, I have found myself considering whether I really want to be a part of this community. After the enjoyment of Scala World, it's sobering and even depressing. /211 reply 4 retweets 88 likesShow this thread -
As I already said, my entire career has been based around Scala. If the actions of
@typelevel and@skillsmatter are making *me* reconsider that choice, then how do they look to a developer who hasn't invested nearly so much of their life into this language? /223 replies 6 retweets 96 likesShow this thread -
But the actions are unlikely to be reversed.
@typelevel will inevitably continue to do a lot of good work for the community, and I shall continue to support their positive contributions, though they shall be forever tainted by yesterday's self-indulgent decision. /231 reply 6 retweets 70 likesShow this thread -
I can do no better than suggest that the best we can do is to move on quickly and hope, against expectation, that
@typelevel and@jdegoes can coexist in the same community, and find the magnanimity not to tear it apart. /2418 replies 13 retweets 141 likesShow this thread -
Replying to @propensive
I've read your points several times and I still don't get who this message is addressed to? You must know full well that once bad blood sets in, calls for unity will do nothing to make people feel better or to change people's behavior or ability to collaborate in the future.
2 replies 0 retweets 3 likes
Jon, calls for unity in this style are more divisive than what we did 
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Replying to @alexelcu @propensive
Alex Nedelcu Retweeted Alex Nedelcu
FYI these are my thoughts on this matter:https://twitter.com/alexelcu/status/1170645993613922305 …
Alex Nedelcu added,
Alex Nedelcu @alexelcuWelcoming environments have fences. Good fences make for good neighbors. For our sanity we should be able to choose the people we work with. This happens naturally, unless coerced. Want to help? Find ways to work within these constraints, instead of unifying people by coercion.0 replies 0 retweets 1 likeThanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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