The people who are content with Rails and Ruby as a whole, and the people who are not.
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which camp do you consider me in?
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Honestly, I'd put you in the latter camp because you've given code to the community and promoted change.
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I think that's accurate. So it probably means something that I'm saying I have collaborated effectively with
@dhh, no?1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Oh, 100%
I'd prefer to see no one ever truly happy with an OSS project and for things to always be changing2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes -
I think that the software community still has a lot to learn from what made Rails so productive for people.
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but instead, we are re-litigating the "complexity wars" over and over again.
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this is right where the crux of the issue is, I think. We all want simplicity but don't agree on what it means
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a strong divide I see is between those who work on many projects for a short term vs. few projects, long term.
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so I think Rails leadership would benefit equally from learning what makes Rails so unproductive for many orgs
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Just because we don't make exactly the changes some people want doesn't mean that we don't understand
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