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flurie | 8 months ago

A lot of work about packaging specifics reads like inside baseball because it is. Most people manage to avoid getting into the specifics of packaging because it’s stuff that mostly gets in the way of the problem they’re trying to solve. But for blessed few packaging is either critical to the problem or is the problem itself. If you never had to learn the inside baseball terminology, it is likely that packaging is not critical to problems that you solve, and I say that without judgment. If you need to get into Nix, you will. There are lots of reasonable ways to manage personal infrastructure that don’t involve Nix. For the problem you describe, I’m not even sure Nix is a preferable solution unless you already use it.

That said, I agree with the original comment. I’m willing to believe that they had these problems and that moving away from Nix was the right decision, but there is little detail in the explanation. They’ve been pretty closed users of Nix to my knowledge, building proprietary tools on top of it without contributing back significantly, and it feels like orgs such as repl.it are contributing back more actively, but this may be a marketing difference as well.

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hnaccount_rng|8 months ago

I spend significant parts of my PhD maintaining the packaging and deployment infrastructure of our group. But yes, I have close to no computer science and reasonably little intrinsic interest in the problem space (though I have a deep appreciation). Still I think I have a better than average understanding of the packaging space..