I mean, I'm fairly certain that this project is the reason Chris Lattner joined Google; it was somehow in his contract somewhere. He just found a way to shoehorn himself in there and make sure that the language that he designed (Swift) is used for something more than just iOS apps. Nothing against him at all, I think most folks would want to push their brainchild as far as they can, but that's just what it looks like from the outside.
Since ML has been a large rage for the last few years, and TensorFlow is one of the most popular frameworks that ML engineers use (although I use and prefer PyTorch) it seemed like the "perfect storm" for Swift to break out of the iOS mold.
But it was clear to me (and many of my peers) that while this was an interesting project, the need for it is really low, and that nobody is going to throw away years of experience with libraries like TensorFlow and PyTorch (via Python) in the trash just so we can use Swift, which for me isn't really that crazy of a language as all the hype makes it out to be, and I'm sure the same is true for many ML devs and researchers alike.
Since ML has been a large rage for the last few years, and TensorFlow is one of the most popular frameworks that ML engineers use (although I use and prefer PyTorch) it seemed like the "perfect storm" for Swift to break out of the iOS mold.
But it was clear to me (and many of my peers) that while this was an interesting project, the need for it is really low, and that nobody is going to throw away years of experience with libraries like TensorFlow and PyTorch (via Python) in the trash just so we can use Swift, which for me isn't really that crazy of a language as all the hype makes it out to be, and I'm sure the same is true for many ML devs and researchers alike.