Is it gonna reach anywhere or die out like kbin and the way it is going i would say mbin ? They are also trying to dip toe in the microblogging platform as well and trying to use lemmy clients and that confuses me as they are promising some features lemmy doesn’t have so how would that and the microblogging part work out on lemmy clients . Also srry if i am at the wrong /c/ and just point me in the right way .

  • Ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    10 months ago

    If it’s due to the devs, could just fork. It seems like the primary motivation is to switch from Rust to Java and switch out the devs at the same time.

    They picked Java specifically because it will make it easier for them to get more contributors.

    • SorteKanin@feddit.dk
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      10 months ago

      I’m not convinced that that is actually true (that it will bring more contributors, that is). We’ll see, but we have yet to see it.

      Rust is an extremely hyped language online these days (just check the size of !rust@programming.dev and !java@programming.dev for example). If we talk about contributors, I don’t think it’s a bad choice. Yes, more people right now know Java (apparently not on programming.dev though? 😅), but probably a lot more people are interested in learning Rust than learning Java (Stack overflows survey suggests so). In the (not close, to be fair) future, there could easily be more Rust devs than Java devs.

      Besides, in my humble opinion as a professional software engineer, Rust is just a better language than Java. It has native speed and much lower memory usage, but more importantly, it’s more reliable and robust than Java (better/more complete error handling essentially). This shouldn’t be surprising - Rust is a much newer language that has been able to take all the good stuff from many different languages from the past.