The Future of Coding podcast features interviews with toolmakers, researchers, computational artists, educators, and engineers, all with compelling viewpoints on what the future of computing could be.

Worse is Better by Richard P. Gabriel

October 29, 2022 1:13:16 70.35 MB Downloads: 0

Following our previous episode on Richard P. Gabriel's Incommensurability paper, we're back for round two with an analysis of what we've dubbed the Worse is Better family of thought products:

  1. The Rise of Worse Is Better by Richard P. Gabriel
  2. Worse is Better is Worse by Nickieben Bourbaki
  3. Is Worse Really Better? by Richard P. Gabriel

Next episode, we've got a recent work by a real up-and-comer in the field. While you may not have heard of him yet, he's a promising young lad who's sure to become a household name.

Links

  • The JIT entitlement on iOS is a thing that exists now.

  • Please, call me Nickieben — Mr. Bourbaki is my father.

  • A pony is a small horse. Also, horses have one toe.

  • Electron lets you build cross-platform apps using web technologies. The apps you build in it are, arguably, doing a bit of "worse is better" when compared to equivalent native apps.

  • Bun is a new JS runner that competes somewhat with NodeJS and Deno, and is arguably an example of "worse is better".

  • esbuild and swc are JS build tools, and are compared to the earlier Babel.

  • The graphs showing the relative lack of churn in Clojure's source code came from Rich Hickey's A History of Clojure talk. To see those graphs, head over to the FoC website for the expanded version of these show notes.

  • Some thoughts about wormholes.

futureofcoding.org/episodes/059

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