Cynical part of me feels like Rust is about to go from the <i>"I like this tech I've been following for years and really dig but can't get a job in it yet"</i> to the <i>"Everyone else has a job in it and claims senior status in it, but I can't"</i> phase.<p>I've been down that road before.<p>Meanwhile there's a lot of immature pieces still. I was looking at SIMD support earlier today (thinking about porting an audio/DSP project from C++) and it's still early days. And Async is still half-baked as others have pointed out.
Nice - Sampling a couple of the videos, the topics are explained really well.<p>This makes it even harder for me to decide what to learn for my next programming language. Go, Rust, or Julia.
I found the whole series pretty useful. Rust is a good addition<p><a href="https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/shows/" rel="nofollow">https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/shows/</a>
Selfish plug here, I started a YouTube channel dedicated to working through Rust as I wanted to get better at it in general. Feel free to check it out for those interested.<p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/c/nyxtom/" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/c/nyxtom/</a>
Isn't rust 10+yrs old now? With 1.0 being 7 years ago? Feels like it's a language people like to talk about but not actually use for anything serious