"The Hard Parts of Open Source" by Evan Czaplicki
As more people enter /r/elm and the Elm discourse, I have thought a lot about how "online communities" work. Patterns of conflict. Why those patterns exist. Structures that would diffuse that conflict in healthy ways. Initially I just wanted to get yelled at less, but I instead stumbled upon "a cultural history of open source" that may reveal a path to more civil and productive online communication in general. Attendees will leave with (1) an inside perspective on open source projects, (2) a historical and cultural framework that I think can improve online communities right now, and (3) some interesting references and ideas to explore further in their own projects and interactions. Speaker: Evan Czaplicki

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"The Economics of Programming Languages" by Evan Czaplicki (Strange Loop 2023)

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"A Tale of Two Asyncs: Open Source Language Design in Rust and Node.js" by Ashley Williams

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🚀 TDD, Where Did It All Go Wrong (Ian Cooper)

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"Categories for the Working Hacker" by Philip Wadler

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Zig 2026: No-AI Policy, $670K Foundation, Left GitHub & Why Zig Isn’t 1.0 - Andrew Kelley Explains

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“What is Success?” by Evan Czaplicki

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"Performance Matters" by Emery Berger

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"Make Data Structures" by Richard Feldman

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"Stop Writing Dead Programs" by Jack Rusher (Strange Loop 2022)

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From Rails to Elm and Haskell - Richard Feldman

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USENIX Security '18-Q: Why Do Keynote Speakers Keep Suggesting That Improving Security Is Possible?

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Evan Czaplicki - Let's be mainstream! User focused design in Elm - Curry On

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Keynote: After the AI Hype – What’s Real, and What’s Next - Richard Campbell - 2026

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"Teaching Elm to Beginners" by Richard Feldman

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Computer Science - Brian Kernighan on successful language design

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Why Can't We Make Simple Software? - Peter van Hardenberg

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The Complexity of Simplicity

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Functional architecture - The pits of success - Mark Seemann

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"Code is the Easy Part" by Evan Czaplicki

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