Your argument that it's correct to not give a shit about tests and security and encryption and memory leaks simply because lots of people are using the project is upside-down, extremely unprofessional, and downright dangerous.
He shipped, but he didn't meet his users or the Internet community's needs, because his users and the Internet at large need safe reliable systems that somebody's actually bothered running the existing unit tests on, instead of security theater, Dunning-Kruger evangelism, and knee-jerk apologetics like your defeatist and fatalistic acceptance and justification of the status quo.
Trotting out Win32 to justify PHP's flaws is pretty unhinged. I'm unsure you're not just a parody account. A serious person would realize they've run out of valid arguments and re-examine their priors before making such an embarrassingly bottom-of-the-barrel justification.
Thomas Midgley Jr. also shipped and made a lasting impact on the world. Changing the world is not the only measure of success, nor justification of harmful impact.
>His legacy is one of inventing the two chemicals that did the greatest environmental damage. Environmental historian J. R. McNeill stated that he "had more adverse impact on the atmosphere than any other single organism in Earth's history." Author Bill Bryson remarked that he possessed "an instinct for the regrettable that was almost uncanny." Science writer Fred Pearce described him as a "one-man environmental disaster".
> Your argument that it's correct to not give a shit about tests and security and encryption and memory leaks simply because lots of people are using the project
That's not my argument. My argument is that while you might give a shit about $THINGS-DON-LIKES in code, the actual market is requiring much more stringent sink-or-swim product decisions.
So, yeah, for you what the market values in that product may be irrelevant to what you value in that code.
> He shipped, but he didn't meet his users or the Internet community's needs,
Obviously he did - he dominated over other languages, even though PHP had next to no marketing budget and was competing against products that had millions, or hundreds of millions, spent on marketing.
The market clearly preferred the product he provided.
> because his users and the Internet at large need safe reliable systems that
Your opinion on what those users needed differs greatly from what those user's expressed that they needed. What $DON thinks other people need is irrelevant when those same other people have opinions of their own.
> I'm unsure you're not just a parody account.
I'm sure you do. I'm not sure how that is relevant.
You're once again making the mistake of assuming that your opinion is actually relevant. It's not, to this argument, relevant at all. All your skepticism about my intention only digresses from the main argument, which is what you thought was good for product delivery turned out to be rejected by the market.
> [snipped digression]
The long and short of it is, your acerbic opinion on what the market needed in 1998 differed greatly from what the market actually chose.
Now, you might make a different argument: that the user's should have chosen a better product.
But the argument you made was that the product made the wrong trade-offs when trading off security for existence.
To my my knowledge, there is no product in the world that makes the trade-off you suggest[1], which is what lead me to believe that you have never been part of a product development.
[1] Remember that even Microsoft made the "make it first, then make it secure" decision with almost their entire product line since the 80s. When the richest companies in the world are making this sort of decision and successfully delivering world-dominating products, there's no question of "Is Don wrong?", it's more a question of "When will Don realise it?"
If you were serious, you would be capable of making much better arguments, and be able to address the ones I made, instead of doubling down on your praise and water carrying of Win32's and PHP's mediocrity and insecurity, and defense of Rasmus's arrogant and negligent carelessness.
Doubling down on your arguments is like bragging about shooting your puppy the face and claiming you stared down Kim Jong-il, instead of just admitting you made a mistake. It doesn't save face as much as you'd like to imagine, or lend any credibility to your self-aggrandizing claims of seriousness and professionalism. You must be fun to work with. /s
> If you were serious, you would be capable of making much better arguments,
The argument I made, viz user's needs from a product are quite different to what you imagine their needs are, is enough. It's actually a self-evident assertion in many contexts.
All the successful products from that time paid little to no attention to security. Phones, operating systems, ERP software, instant messaging. I don't see how PHP was different in this regard.
Nothing and no one was paying attention to security: you could (and I did) send email by simply telnetting to a server and talking SMTP to it. The internet was not a place where security was a large consideration. The only secure thing was https, which few places used.
You, on the other hand, are quick to call someone a shill, quick to impugn someone else to make your argument look stronger and ignore any arguments made in favour of what your emotions tell you.
He shipped, but he didn't meet his users or the Internet community's needs, because his users and the Internet at large need safe reliable systems that somebody's actually bothered running the existing unit tests on, instead of security theater, Dunning-Kruger evangelism, and knee-jerk apologetics like your defeatist and fatalistic acceptance and justification of the status quo.
Trotting out Win32 to justify PHP's flaws is pretty unhinged. I'm unsure you're not just a parody account. A serious person would realize they've run out of valid arguments and re-examine their priors before making such an embarrassingly bottom-of-the-barrel justification.
Thomas Midgley Jr. also shipped and made a lasting impact on the world. Changing the world is not the only measure of success, nor justification of harmful impact.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Midgley_Jr.
>His legacy is one of inventing the two chemicals that did the greatest environmental damage. Environmental historian J. R. McNeill stated that he "had more adverse impact on the atmosphere than any other single organism in Earth's history." Author Bill Bryson remarked that he possessed "an instinct for the regrettable that was almost uncanny." Science writer Fred Pearce described him as a "one-man environmental disaster".
PHP is the CFC of programming languages.