Hence the bait and switch. IMHO increasing the scope of Airflow (or any tool) is a challenging proposition. Would you rather use very few mega-tools with very broad scope (and potentially more challenging domain to navigate) or fewer more specialised tools that interoperate well together?
Obviously there are trade-offs with either approach, but then I'd argue that making Airflow solve more problems will introduce more trade-offs too.
Obviously there are trade-offs with either approach, but then I'd argue that making Airflow solve more problems will introduce more trade-offs too.