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Every year Stallman sounds less crazy. I used to think it didn't matter what tools I chose as a lone developer making consumer tech products and DSP audio applications. But over time, I saw that consumers rely on frontier-makers more than you think, even though they may lag behind by a few years. I reluctantly switched to Firefox because it still has add-ons and since Chrome's web tools are so good. With Mozilla's Rust adoption, Firefox got fast. This means my web products work a little better on Firefox, intentional or not. When enough people make that choice, a tipping point forms in the future. Paul Graham wrote about this in "The Return of the Mac" [^1]. Don't underestimate the power of your choice at the frontier, even if it takes a while to reverberate through time. [^1]: http://www.paulgraham.com/mac.html |
Decades later, I think we are still at a point where following his ideas come at a very steep price in performance and day to day usage.
For instance any dev that touches an iOs app in any way or form (even if it’s just to run in on test devices) is better off with a mac.
There’s ton of prevalent android apps that won’t work without the Play Store, and even rooting the phone is already seen as an hostile act from many vendors.
The list goes on and on, keeping hardware or software free is still an insane move that needs sizeable sacrifices. And it’s scary there’s no indication of the situation to change for the better.