From reading the author's other posts, the clear implication is that Lisp (and only the author's preferred flavors of Lisp, not pale imitations like Clojure) offers the only possibility of breaking out of the hopelessly broken paradigms accepted by the unwashed masses.
Personally, for all the problems and terrible design decisions that we're all living with, I find a whole lot of what fellow programmers do amazing and inspirational. A lot of the stuff they produce with so-called broken and unproductive tools are amazing products that provide a lot of productivity and enjoyment for a wide range of people. I've also found that almost any sufficiently popular language or environment has its share of brilliant, original thinkers trying to build new tools to make things easier and better for others. These are people who should be thanked and celebrated for their contributions.
I looked further into the author's blog posts. The dominant themes are bilious and scornful attacks on other's work, or lamentations about the sad state of software today. He claims to be producing a Lisp-based operating system. Curious to see his progress, I checked the source repository, to find that it only contains a README indignantly protesting the the treatment he's received from others.
This guy's combination of arrogance, scorn, and complete lack of demonstrated competence makes him oddly fascinating. I wonder what kind of social factors in our industry produce people like this, and how we can work to counteract them.
The dominant themes are bilious and scornful attacks on other's work, or lamentations about the sad state of software today. He claims to be producing a Lisp-based operating system. Curious to see his progress, I checked the source repository, to find that it only contains a README indignantly protesting the the treatment he's received from others.
Personally, for all the problems and terrible design decisions that we're all living with, I find a whole lot of what fellow programmers do amazing and inspirational. A lot of the stuff they produce with so-called broken and unproductive tools are amazing products that provide a lot of productivity and enjoyment for a wide range of people. I've also found that almost any sufficiently popular language or environment has its share of brilliant, original thinkers trying to build new tools to make things easier and better for others. These are people who should be thanked and celebrated for their contributions.
I looked further into the author's blog posts. The dominant themes are bilious and scornful attacks on other's work, or lamentations about the sad state of software today. He claims to be producing a Lisp-based operating system. Curious to see his progress, I checked the source repository, to find that it only contains a README indignantly protesting the the treatment he's received from others.
This guy's combination of arrogance, scorn, and complete lack of demonstrated competence makes him oddly fascinating. I wonder what kind of social factors in our industry produce people like this, and how we can work to counteract them.