As far as I have seen until now the community feels different.
>> And maybe I missed it, but I didn't see anywhere he threatened to "use the site for damaging
>> the reputation of the Scala community as a whole".
> My way of working through my sadness about opportunities lost, my way of
> mourning these losses will be expressed on scala-tools.org. I will use
> something I had a mighty hand in building to express sadness about what
> could have been.
and
> I am not retiring the name. It will be a place that mourns the loss of dignity that the Scala community is suffering.
But this wasn't the first blog post with non-constructive criticism, (rambling, ... whatever you want to call it) and a deactivated comment system.
When I complain, I leave at least the feedback channel open. Otherwise it isn't quite surprising that some people are unable to fit enough diplomacy into 140 chars. (Which cannot be an excuse if there were actual insults (which I have not been able to verify yet), but the Twitter stream tells a lot about the other way around at least in one occasion).
In the end, I think it comes down to the usual political/financial stuff:
- Excitment about Lift cooled down and some people changed their opinion from "uber-cool" to "interesting, but a lot of misuse of the programming language"
- Typesafe partnering with Play! instead of Lift
Which more or less fits with his comments about selling the domain. Who - except Typesafe - would have the money to buy it?
> But this wasn't the first blog post with non-constructive criticism, (rambling, ... whatever you want to call it) and a deactivated comment system.
Given the hostile responses he's had on Twitter, I can't blame him for not allowing comments on his blog. This doesn't help repair the already bad reputation that the Scala community has.
He doesn't owe scala-tools.org to anyone for the same reason he doesn't owe readers of his blog comments: it's his blog, his rules.
>> And maybe I missed it, but I didn't see anywhere he threatened to "use the site for damaging
>> the reputation of the Scala community as a whole".
> My way of working through my sadness about opportunities lost, my way of
> mourning these losses will be expressed on scala-tools.org. I will use
> something I had a mighty hand in building to express sadness about what
> could have been.
and
> I am not retiring the name. It will be a place that mourns the loss of dignity that the Scala community is suffering.
But this wasn't the first blog post with non-constructive criticism, (rambling, ... whatever you want to call it) and a deactivated comment system.
When I complain, I leave at least the feedback channel open. Otherwise it isn't quite surprising that some people are unable to fit enough diplomacy into 140 chars. (Which cannot be an excuse if there were actual insults (which I have not been able to verify yet), but the Twitter stream tells a lot about the other way around at least in one occasion).
In the end, I think it comes down to the usual political/financial stuff:
- Excitment about Lift cooled down and some people changed their opinion from "uber-cool" to "interesting, but a lot of misuse of the programming language"
- Typesafe partnering with Play! instead of Lift
Which more or less fits with his comments about selling the domain. Who - except Typesafe - would have the money to buy it?