I talk to a lot of developers today who seem to have little-to-no experience evaluating coupling, cohesion, resource usage, error modes, etc. And I think our industry is much worse off for it. The concepts are difficult to learn. They're even more difficult to apply.
IMO, Rich's style is similar to PG's, in that he makes a series of strong but vague claims that could mean many different things. I don't know about Rich, but PG will often respond to criticism by saying that he was misread, even when the majority of readers have the "misreading"
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I don't personally find this very compelling, but that's my own set of biases (I have correlated beliefs like, Death of the Author, descriptivism over prescriptivism, harm reduction in UX, etc.). I'm not saying Rich would say that, but I think that's the defense presented here.
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Your summary of your interpretation of the talk is v. clear and is, what, 10 tweets? If that's what was meant, why didn't he say that? It's a long talk, there was plenty of time. Instead, there are much longer sections that could be read as a jeremiad against types and objects.
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