If your site has more than 500k of JS (uncompressed), you don't get to look down on "jQuery developers".
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Replying to @briankardell @slightlylate
Pioneers, who despite long odds and lacking browsers, fought to move the web forward in a time of great darkness.
2 replies 3 retweets 42 likes -
Back then, they were heralded as heros fighting for better experiences for their users, both on the wide open web and intranets everywhere.
3 replies 1 retweet 12 likes -
Replying to @justinribeiro @slightlylate
I feel like that isn't what
@slightlylate actually meant tho (ie not folks who developed jQuery) & that's why I asked. Don't hear this a lot1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Did you mean 'people who don't use mv* frameworks'?
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Replying to @briankardell @justinribeiro
Something like that. The folks who look down on people making "raw" web experiences are hard to classify beyond their disdain.
1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @slightlylate @justinribeiro
Making everyone understands nuance is a hard problem, this is why we get 'camps' where devs make it seem 2 'experts' 100% disagree who don't
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Replying to @briankardell @justinribeiro
This is why I'm results-oriented: good things for users are good and I do not care how you get there. Functional? Reactive? Templated? DGAF.
2 replies 0 retweets 7 likes
...but that doesn't mean I'm blind to the trend-line outcomes. Certain approaches correlate more often with failure.
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