This page doesn't sell it to me. Maybe it's a great language, who knows?<p>1. With Go, I understand the point. It makes advances in terms of how easy it is to write concurrent programs, without completely ditching the traditional imperative model.<p>2. Rust is a different take on the same point. We want concurrency and safety. Rust's difference from Go is that it is more safe, and makes it easier to give latency guarantees.<p>But I don't get what's "hard" about, say, Go, that Crack would make things easier for me. What does Crack offer that Go doesn't? Or Python? Why would I want to use Crack at all?<p>(I get that they want to say it's "addictive" so they'll call it "crack", but it's a terrible name. I worked for a company that wanted a product to go viral so they code-named it "Marburg", after a biological weapon. Maybe I should name my next product "Enola Gay" because it will level the competition?)