The story of how Microsoft embraced and then killed AppGet
Keivan Beigi, the developer behind AppGet, a package manager for Windows, claims Microsoft copied his software. He was contacted by Microsoft as a possible hire, and flew in to Microsoft's headquarters to talk about AppGet, and after suddenly being ghosted, Microsoft announced WinGet - what he claims is pretty much a direct copy.
Realistically, no matter how hard I tried to promote AppGet, it would never grow at the rate a Microsoft solution would. I didn't create AppGet to get rich or to become famous or get hired by Microsoft. I created AppGet because I thought us Windows users deserved a decent app management experience too.
What bothers me is how the whole thing was handled. The slow and dreadful communication speed. The total radio silence at the end. But the part that hurts the most was the announcement. AppGet, which is objectively where most ideas for WinGet came from, was only mentioned as another package manager that just happened to exist; While other package managers that WinGet shares very little with were mentioned and explained much more deliberately.
This is the kind of stuff big tech does, so it really shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone.