I presume this relates, directly or indirectly, to the Anaconda licensing changes.
Even though you can avoid the license issues (eg with conda-forge) it brought up a discussion where we looked into moving away and found we didn't face anything like the challenges we used to (which had originally brought us to conda) - feels like this may have backfired on Anaconda and perhaps that's borne out by the usage points the pytorch post mentions.
Even though you can avoid the license issues (eg with conda-forge) it brought up a discussion where we looked into moving away and found we didn't face anything like the challenges we used to (which had originally brought us to conda) - feels like this may have backfired on Anaconda and perhaps that's borne out by the usage points the pytorch post mentions.