Do you have any multi-year case studies of a real world, revenue generating application that successfully shows this? In my experience, software is never done, features are always added, never removed, which typically means "more script". This is a game of cost mitigation.
-
-
-
You're conflating a few things here that are worth untangling: first, many of the failures I see are either new development or redevelopment. E.g., "green" field. It short be easier to succeed in these environments, yet unusable amounts of JS are the norm...
- 7 more replies
New conversation -
-
-
This is a really good point
- 3 more replies
New conversation -
-
-
How many traces did you look at on your vacation Alex.
- 1 more reply
New conversation -
-
-
Well I'm glad at least someone is saying this. I did a talk that's kind of related FWIW.https://youtu.be/tzfHlEFd2Fk
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
-
-
-
I don't think this is a fair characterization of framework teams or their goals.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
-
-
-
Using JS frameworks is the "easy" way out. They mostly trade user experience for developer experience. Just a few days back Reddit dropped styled-components due to perf issues. A few weeks back Airbnb dropped React native. Things are finally starting to come around I think.
-
Although — you don't need a framework to mess up your website. See the new Gmail which is an abomination:pic.twitter.com/4lXP1MtD9b
- 1 more reply
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.
& Web Standards TL; Blink API OWNER
Named PWAs w/
DMs open. Tweets my own; press@google.com for official comms.