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That ecosystem is crumbling too, unfortunately. Where, for example, in 2015 any SaaS or API would provide a gem (lib) to interact with it, today it's no longer the case. Modern PSPs, storage, search engines, etc almost all lack an official gem. Often lack even a third party one. And where back in 2015 there were popular systems in Ruby outside of rails, all those are crumbling and/or gone. Jekyll is no longer the go-to static site manager, Chef and Puppet no longer the obvious devops tools. And Ruby is completely absent from emerging technology (AI, blockchain, WASM, data science, etc). I'm afraid Ruby is becoming a legacy language and Rails' will be a legacy framework soon. Where the bulk of the Ruby jobs are to keep old stuff running and maintained. Afraid, because I'm still primarily Ruby developer. |
There are new books written, new conferences organised, Hanami 2 is out, new organisation created by companies to support Rails docs and marketing, Phlex is a nice way to work with views, someone started to work again on Camping, someone else is working again on a new portof shoes.rb
More content is created everyday: see for example dev.to starting to have beginner articles. A very good sign.
now regarding your fear, what I can say is act like your fear is real and it will be in some way or another.