Berlin based technology consultancy specialising in the Rust programming language. We offer development, implementation, training and long-term support.
It is indeed clear that you’re kidding, but it’s not clear that you understand what a certified compiler is for. It’s not like RHEL, and it has nothing to do with licensing or even packaging/distribution. It’s also not something that Ferrocene needs to “sell” in the sense of convincing users to migrate to it from rustc: either you need a certified compiler and you therefore can’t use Rust at all until one exists, or you don’t need one and there’s no reason to wait for one to exist.
You’re correct that bureaucracy is effectively the reason why the concept of compiler certification exists, but it seems like you’re ignoring the fact that the devs burdened by this bureaucracy generally don’t have a choice in the matter.
…yeah, sorry, I honestly can’t tell what point you were trying to make, even with the explanation. You call it an “ad” but also say they’re not trying to convince users to migrate, so what do you think they want?
It is indeed clear that you’re kidding, but it’s not clear that you understand what a certified compiler is for. It’s not like RHEL, and it has nothing to do with licensing or even packaging/distribution. It’s also not something that Ferrocene needs to “sell” in the sense of convincing users to migrate to it from rustc: either you need a certified compiler and you therefore can’t use Rust at all until one exists, or you don’t need one and there’s no reason to wait for one to exist.
You’re correct that bureaucracy is effectively the reason why the concept of compiler certification exists, but it seems like you’re ignoring the fact that the devs burdened by this bureaucracy generally don’t have a choice in the matter.
The parallels between this and RHEL (including RHEL derivatives like Oracle Linux) are maybe longer than you think.
Not sure what you mean. I don’t think I implied that that’s the point of certification.
But:
I think all of this is very much relevant info to know.
* “downstream” is the fifth word in the article/ad.
Something is being sold by Ferrous Systems. I don’t think that’s a point of dispute by anyone!
Now, what that something exactly looks like will depend, in part, on the answers to the questions above, no?
I didn’t argue that. I don’t think anyone argued that.
In case you didn’t realize, the quintessential Arch user wouldn’t be the target of a RHEL sales pitch either 😉 .
And now any remnants of a joke are ruined by all the explaining.
…yeah, sorry, I honestly can’t tell what point you were trying to make, even with the explanation. You call it an “ad” but also say they’re not trying to convince users to migrate, so what do you think they want?