Comment by metadope
3 months ago
I do all of my browsing with Javascript disabled. I've done this for decades now, as a security precaution mainly, but I've also enjoyed some welcome side-effects where paywalls disappeared and ads became static and unobtrusive. I wasn't looking for those benefits but I'll take 'em. In stride.
I've also witnessed a welcome (but slow) change in site implementations over the years: there are few sites completely broken by the absence of JS. Still some give blank screens and even braindead :hidden attributes thrown into the <noscript> main page to needlessly forbid access... but not as many as back in the day when JS first became the rage.
I don't know much about XSLT other than the fact that my Hiawatha web server uses it to make my directory listings prettier, and I don't have to add CSS or JS to get some style. I hate to see a useful standard abandoned by the big boys, but what can I do about it?
I bristle when I encounter pages with a few hundred words of content surrounded by literally megabytes of framework and flotsam, but that's the gig, right, wading through the crap to find the ponies.
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