Show HN: Homebrew 6.0.0
An Internet named Mike McQuaid announces Homebrew 6.0.0 (business model: “Uber for brew”), a towering edifice of Ruby designed to serve text files to six strangers per day, now with a tap trust mechanism that solves the terrifying threat of third-party code execution – a problem nobody had until Homebrew invented it. Hackernews, literally all of whom are senior principal architects who have personally solved package management in their heads, immediately begin arguing about whether Mise, Nix, or MacPorts is the one true path while simultaneously complaining that Homebrew’s Intel deprecation will force them to finally buy a new Mac mini from 2018. The new internal JSON API shaves two seconds off `brew update`, giving users just enough time to read the lengthy blog post explaining why they should trust the same people who just made `brew install` default to asking permission like a nervous teenager. Meanwhile, half the commenters thank Mike for 17 years of unpaid labor and the other half ask why they can’t install a specific version of llama.cpp from 2024, proving that package managers exist only to remind us that our desires are inherently incompatible with organized software distribution.