As someone who has been in Internet, e-commerce and the all around development of the web almost since its inception, this article makes me feel very, very old.
I’ve started using raw JavaScript in all my projects. There’s something about not relying on any libraries that makes it feel so much more powerful. The best AI models are very good at writing raw JavaScript, meaning you can easily create your own single page application structure. All I want are single page web applications using pure HTML, CSS, and JavaScript.
I am obligated to comment on this due to my profile picture. 💜
you know what eich also did?
he funded/staffed/managed/supported another language into life
the language that’s going to save computing for humanity
RUST
redemption arc complete
Well he’s also got some disagreeable political opinions, so I dunno about redemption.
The success of Rust can be laid at the feet of many people, but critically Graydon Hoare — He wrote an article a couple years ago about his stewardship, and it’s been something I go back to frequently. Just reading you get a sense of the immense intelligence, maturity, and sensitivity he possess, and imbued the project with.
Yeah, and Eich is the a***e behind brave…
I know what you mean, buddy. I remember when Netscape navigator was a new and amazing piece of software. All I’d ever used before that was NCSA Mosaic.

My god that is nostalgic.
That’s me!
This is giving me flashbacks of waiting 10 minutes for a page to load
But I also remember being able to hack in custom animations into that little box. There were some cool ones.
New feature: the <IMG> tag
Dude… I’ve used text-based internet. Long, long ago, when all you got was webpages in plain text.
Hello fellow Kermit, Gopher and Usenet veteran.
Usenet is still in use. And so is Nostr and Geminispace.
Kermit, so fancy! I remember the excitement of discovering ZMODEM and how much better it was than the old standard of XMODEM.
Alternate title:
In 1995, a Netscape employee wrote a hack in 10 days that ruined the Internet
And native software.
Because JavaScript runs everywhere, we have companies creating “apps” and PC “programs” that are little more than glorified web views. There’s normally nothing wrong with having shared code across implementations, but when that shared code is a 4 MB bundle of crap that creates 100s of MB in dictionaries and JIT compiler caches, you’re ruining the end-user experience.
100s of MB in dictionaries and JIT compiler caches
Don’t forget the hundreds of MBs of NPM dependencies
test
oh shit i posted a funny comment but the bot thought it was malware so my request got blocked





