Some apps rely so heavily on system runtimes that they’d be crippled without embedding their own runtime. Marked makes use of the system Ruby runtime when it compiles Scrivener documents for preview, and many of my customers use Custom Processors that rely on scripting runtimes, even if they have limited experience in the shell. Don’t forget, even Homebrew requires Ruby to install itself, so that’s a speed bump to easily installing command line tools. Feasible, but unlikely that I’d ever get around to updating everything that uses bash scripting at its core. I’m unclear as to whether bash will be removed from the default install entirely, but doing so would also require many of my projects to be re-tooled for zsh so as not to require every user to install bash just to run a simple shell script. The announcements also include a switch from Bash to Zsh as the default shell. We're always working to improve Dropzone and we're going to bring you many free feature updates and more actions in future.Brett Terpstra has penned a blog post about this as well: See our full Terms of Use for Dropzone 4 here: You can restart your subscription at any time to continue using Dropzone cloud actions and the advanced features detailed above. If you do, Dropzone cloud actions and the advanced features detailed above will no longer be available.
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