The case for Nushell, https://www.jntrnr.com/case-for-nushell/.
Relevant article about shells, and how Nushell pushes the boundaries further. I highly recommend reading it.
The case for Nushell, https://www.jntrnr.com/case-for-nushell/.
Relevant article about shells, and how Nushell pushes the boundaries further. I highly recommend reading it.
@hywan @Keltounet Question: "can the state of shells be improved enough to overcome the inertia of sticking to what you know?"
This is the wrong question. It presupposes zero cost of transition, while the cognitive workload of learning a new shell rises exponentially with age (hint: I'm nearly 60, shells are harder to adapt to than a new GUI). Stability and continuity are essential prerequisites to productivity!
@Keltounet @hywan Computing is not my job. It hasn't been my job for over two decades. Time spent learning a new shell or thinking about computers is time *wasted* from the non-compsci point of view.
Thing is, the question about the utility of switching to a new shell has embedded ideological assumptions that implicitly privilege computing over applications. To 99% of the world applications of computing are the priority; the machines and software are just an annoying drag on getting stuff done.
@tshepang @Keltounet @hywan UI changes in corporate products seem to happen purely to justify the product manager's request for a pay rise at their annual review! And at Google, old products get killed ruthlessly to make way for new products because that's the only way a manager can earn promotion.
This shit is actively hostile to the users' interests, but it's ubiquitous.
I mean, Canonical think 5 years is "long term stable" for Ubuntu, which is bullshit: should be AT LEAST a decade.
@cstross @tshepang @Keltounet @hywan I mean, on the other hand, 10 years LTS is... really expensive if not impossible. Computers are not some magical thing frozen in time. Maintenance costs rise fast, and not linearly with time, especially with context change.
I totally agree with your point on the UX change ofc, but for example, in terms of shell, as he mentioned in the article... Nushell is not really meant to replace your use of shell. It is built to replace glue scripts. And yes. needed.
@Di4na @tshepang @Keltounet @hywan
"Maintenance costs rise fast"
... which is why IBM mainframes still happily run Series 360 assembly programs from the early 1960s, the hardware is all hot-swappable and fault tolerant, and the main backward compatability issue is finding folks who know what the bottom of the application stack is even supposed to do (the original designers all died of old age).
The inevitability of perpetual churn is a lie. It can be avoided.
@cstross @tshepang @Keltounet @hywan I mean yes, it costs so much to run stuff still on these machines that the estimated cost reduction from moving away from them and paying for the churn is regularly considered order of magnitude cheaper than to keep paying that cost. Ofc the cost of switching is high because it has accumulated over time.
I have seen the accountant doing the maths, I have been in these rooms. It can be avoided, totally. But the costs is rarely one anyone is ready to pay.
@cursedsql @cstross @tshepang @Keltounet @hywan multiple things.
But mostly, because these parts are not the cost. The costs are the design of the board to fit them to our needs. That cost has dropped a bit but not that much. And if you go find an electronic board from 50years ago, you will quickly find out that most of the part are not produced anymore. That it is the wrong voltage for the modern part that replaced them. That the connectors do not fit. Etc.
The parts still exist. Sometimes.
@cursedsql @cstross @tshepang @Keltounet @hywan but combining them together in a way that fit your current needs and the rest of the world they interact with? Not so much.
An example. Most of that IBM 360 emulated stuff mentioned above? Only handle really specific text encoding. Better hope you do not need an apostrophe or an accent in your last name.
@cursedsql @cstross @tshepang @Keltounet @hywan also better hope you don't plan to still use them by 2039. Or that someone was paid to handle the millenium bug.
Even if the parts stay still, the world does not.
@cursedsql @cstross @tshepang @Keltounet @hywan you realise i spent multiple years of my life trying to rebuild electronic cards to keep high speed trains from 50 years ago running?
Also the ibm 360 was less than 1% of the systems at that time. It surviving is an exception showing how hard it is. And costly. And how only a few can do it?