Thanks for the original link, the brief rehash at fudzilla was so badly written that I didn't bother responding.
One thing I notice about the list is that all of the languages are highly cross-platform, with regular use on multiple major OS platforms, with the possible exception of C# and Kotlin. Swift does pretty well considering it's mostly used on Darwin platforms today.
Of course, that is changing, as I was just reading this substack post from earlier this year about the state of Swift tooling on Windows by Jeremy from The Browser Company. I suspect they are planning on releasing an Android SDK also with Swift 6, just like I hope to release an Android SDK bundle in the coming months that can be used easily with any of the linux/mac/win host toolchains.
Your static SDK for linux has garnered a lot of attention, and work on linux and embedded is ongoing.
I think it is too early to predict how this next wave of languages ends up doing. Maybe they will completely supplant older languages like C, C++, Java, and Javascript, or maybe some of those older languages will adapt and resurge again.