Google is a terribly unhelpful tool for much journalistic and historical analysis. Part of a serious problem with the no-memory generation we are now seeing.
Google and Wikipedia have been largely discredited because they lack the verifiability of primary sources (academically speaking).
awhit...@gmail.com -- I would love to see some of your research when you have it available. As far as I can tell, the early days of Rails (2005-2010) went largely undocumented from a journalistic perspective. I think analysis of the archives of the mailing lists as well as Github pull requests would be an interesting and worthwhile endeavor.
I would also try searching Lexus Nexus publications for published works that had interviews of some of the early creators of Rails. Also maybe dig through Ars Technica and some of the other specialized tech-focused bulletin boards to see if you can pull up some interesting discussions.
I would also point out that one of the significant turning points in Rails history was the 2009 Rails-Merb story, itself an interesting historical narrative given light of recent developments of Node/NPM.
Good luck!
-Jason
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