This resonates so much. As someone who's more on the builder/product side than engineering, I've always felt that barrier with Python tooling. The learning curve for environment management has been one of those silent productivity killers.
What strikes me about uv is that it seems to understand that not everyone launching a Python-based project has a CS degree. That accessibility matters—especially in the era where more non-engineers are building products.
Curious: for those who've switched to uv, did you notice any friction when collaborating with team members who were still on traditional setups? I'm thinking about adoption challenges when you're not a solo builder.
This resonates so much. As someone who's more on the builder/product side than engineering, I've always felt that barrier with Python tooling. The learning curve for environment management has been one of those silent productivity killers.
What strikes me about uv is that it seems to understand that not everyone launching a Python-based project has a CS degree. That accessibility matters—especially in the era where more non-engineers are building products.
Curious: for those who've switched to uv, did you notice any friction when collaborating with team members who were still on traditional setups? I'm thinking about adoption challenges when you're not a solo builder.