“AppleScript has been around since the early ’90s, and it’s shrugged off such rumours many times in the past.”
The other thing that was around since the early ’90s was the Mac Automation/AppleScript development team. Even after its original creators quit in frustration at the lack of support, there was still a team to [nominally] work on it. However, the Mac Automation team got canned in 2016; and while I completely agree with Apple’s firing of its manager (and wish it’d had been done a decade sooner when a new manager could’ve been appointed to turn it around), it is apparent there are no longer any engineers tasked to AppleScript and its related technologies beyond a minimal maintenance role. (And even those minimal API additions made to accommodate securty are half-baked and poorly tested at best.)
Beyond that, the AppleScript language itself is at the end of its lifecycle, and with no apparent moves to straighten out the very dated and arcane Apple event IPC systems that underpin it and bring that technology to iOS, it’s painfully obvious it has no future beyond slowly rotting away. All that tech all be fixed/replaced/reinvigorated, and reborn as the cross-platform cornerstone for all high-level interprocess communication and end-user automation, but there’s nobody left to do it; and even when there was they had no clue why or how! (Which is why there is nobody now.)
Even Soghoian dropped broad hints post-ejection that Apple envisages the future of cross-platform automation in Siri-based technologies (now including [conversational] Shortcuts) and App Extensions, and he was the one who cratered its predecessor. And that is not necessarily a bad future, but it is still one far less capable or flexible that what could’ve, should’ve, would’ve had by now had the Apple events stack not been long since run into the ground.
I know Apple seriously restricts individual employees discussing current and future plans, but I wish someone there would just be honest and officially declare the whole technology stack Legacy Technology to be Deprecated in a future release of macOS, so that all users now know exactly where they stand and can plan their own futures accordingly.†Yes, radical change hurts and they’ll complain like ****, but it’s still massively less damaging than radical change with zero notice.
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† (And if you lose a few print shops to Windows as a result, so what? That hasn’t been a key market for Apple in 15 years, and is probably more trouble than it’s worth. At least with a timeline they can migrate sensibly, and customers generally appreciate a vendor—even an ex-one—who treats them professionally and doesn’t burn their business from under them.)