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by coliveira 685 days ago
They found a niche that can pay the price to have an innovative product. I believe they did the right thing, after all it is not a product trying to solve all problems in the world. Other people could learn from their techniques and do the same for other areas and languages.
2 comments

Not quite where I was going. The product does seem to be good and there is demand for it in many industries I'd think, but instead of using discriminatory pricing and having people pay less that have a much lower ability to pay, they just ignore the segment entirely. Maybe they know what they're doing though. It's a shame I don't get to use it at work
Semiconductor manufacturers understand that giving free samples of their chips to hobbyists creates an environment that breeds future sales: if 1 out of the 1000 people they mailed samples uses their chip in the design for a commercial product, they come out ahead.

Proprietary programming languages that are inconvenient for hobbyists to obtain- any more friction than cloning a git repo or installing via a package manager- have stunted open-source ecosystems, and in turn limited opportunities for grass-roots adoption.