>since the community seems perfectly content being niche.
This is just admitting defeat. There is no reason Emacs couldn't be the number one editor right now. GNU projects in general all tend to fail to innovate and seem to ignore the last couple of decades of learnings.
> There is no reason Emacs couldn't be the number one editor right now
I suspect you're right that under different stewardship Emacs could have taken over the wold. And who knows, if they cared to run usability studies on the initial user experience it might still be possible.
> This is just admitting defeat
If you assume that everyone values popularity or ease-of-use then this is a reasonable conclusion.
But if you'd forgive some unsolicited advice: assuming everyone shares your values will make it hard to understand or predict other people's actions which will hinder your attempts to communicate, negotiate, or manage anyone not like you. It may be simpler to imagine they're crazy, foolish, or deluded but personally I've found it useful to operate under the assumption that their values are real and just as valid as mine.
seems like you have a bit of an agenda. are you sour about something ? for me emacs is probably the best piece of software i ever used and i use my hardware for everything :|
I'm sour that emacs sucks. I would like to be able to use it for everything, but if I'm being honest with myself other editors simply work better for me.
This is just admitting defeat. There is no reason Emacs couldn't be the number one editor right now. GNU projects in general all tend to fail to innovate and seem to ignore the last couple of decades of learnings.