During the course of my hobby OS research I was excited to stumble upon BitC. I 
wanted to write my own kernel, from scratch, just for the fun of it, but I 
didn't want to use C. What was the point? It had all been done before: see 
Unix, Linux, Mach, etc. C++ was out; too complicated, messy, ugly, just blah. I 
looked at D (and I'm still looking) but it seems to be heading down the wrong 
path, even though one of it's core principles is being a practical language. It 
now has heaps and heaps of keywords, three competing compilers, and two 
competing standard libraries. Around the same time I bought myself a book about 
programming in Haskell and absolutely feel in love with the type system and the 
clean syntax. Wouldn't it be awesome, I thought, if there was a language that 
had something like Haskell's type system and type classes, the clutter free 
syntax of python, and the low-level power of C. Then I stumbled upon BitC.

It looked like the language I was looking for. Thinks started to look up. But 
then I read about Jonathan Shapiro's departure to Microsoft and the the halting 
of the development of BitC. I'm not a language guru by any means (not the best 
programmer in town either) so I don't think I could contribute much to the 
project in any meaningful way. Having said that all that, I'd hate to see BitC 
die an early death. So my question is:

Is BitC pretty much dead?
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