I'm totally not waiting. This isn't the first time Perl6 has been 'production ready' It wasn't all those years ago, and won't be in Jan 2016 either. No jobs, no deep libraries, no SDK support... The list is unending. If we'd put 1/10 the time into minor improvements to perl5 over the past 15 years we'd have most of what people seem to like about Perl6 in a language you can actually get a job. Instead we have two languages with no future instead of one...
Likely 'Rakudo Star', which was advertized as a a useful, usable, "early adopter" distribution of Perl 6 back in 2010 (and has had regular releases ever since[1]).
Yeah, that was my thinking, too - but no one was under the impression that Rakudo Star was anything but a sneak preview of Perl 6 - something to fiddle around with, and go, "oh hey, neat!", and not to launch a business on. It answered the question, "just what exactly are you up to?"
Here's how it was described in 2010:
Rakudo Star is aimed at “early adopters” of Perl 6. We know that it still has some bugs, it is far slower than it ought to be, and there are some advanced pieces of the Perl 6 language specification that aren’t implemented yet. But Rakudo Perl 6 in its current form is also proving to be viable (and fun) for developing applications and exploring a great new language. These “Star” releases are intended to make Perl 6 more widely available to programmers, grow the Perl 6 codebase, and gain additional end-user feedback about the Perl 6 language and Rakudo’s implementation of it.http://rakudo.org/2010/10/28/rakudo-star-2010-10-released/
Although the gp doesn't post much, they are obviously a busy, respected, and influential member of the Perl community. I'm confused why they are so doom and gloom over this amazing new language (Perl 6) that is nearly a stable release.
chromatic is hardly unbiased in that respect. He has some good points, he's an insightful person and a good communicator, but IIRC he's admitted that he might be at least somewhat biased in his opinions to me here on HN in the past due to his history with Parrot and the past Perl 6/Parrot issues (which is to be expected. I would doubt anyone who claimed to be unbiased with his history).
That said, his recent comments on HN regarding this issue seem to only half the time making a cogent argument, and the other half the time being pithy snipes, and at this point I'm not sure he's not working with vastly outdated information.
(I find particular amusement in rereading Moritz's post in that thread.)
I would doubt anyone who claimed to be unbiased with his history
It's certainly possible that a mysterious GitHub error revoked my commit access late one night, but the timing seems suspicious. I'll own up to my mistakes, but the rewriting of history seems unfair.
With regard to you admitting bias? I don't recall specifically, we discussed it in depth a few times, so it could very well have been a feeling I left with and not a specific statement (and I'll fully admit I might have been projecting).
> I would doubt anyone who claimed to be unbiased with his history
What I meant was that was that anyone who has a complicated past where they feel misrepresented and that they were treated unfairly is bound to be biased in some way, and to claim otherwise would show a lack of introspection. It wasn't meant to be insulting, or something I thought you should feel the need to defend, it's more a general worldview of mine. Bias is hard to overcome and harder to eliminate. There's plenty of things I would like to think I'm unbiased about, but in reality I'm probably not.
I'm getting a strong feeling of Deja Vu. I think we may have had this discussion or one like it previously.
Somewhat the same problem with Python as well. I really would like to see Perl 6 become a standard, I guess craigslist uses Perl 6 if anything now that I think about it.
For now, it's fun to see what the future will bring. I'm excited.