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Comment by swyx

3 hours ago

> Apps may come and go, but files stay—at least, as long as our apps think in files.

yes: https://www.swyx.io/data-outlasts-code-but

all lasting work is done in files/data (can be parsed permissionlessly, still useful if partially corrupted), but economic incentives keep pushing us to keep things in code (brittle, dies basically when one of maintainer|buildtools|hardware substrate dies).

when standards emerge (forcing code to accept/emit data) that is worth so much to a civilization. a developer ecosystem tipping the incentive scales such that companies like the Googl/Msft/OpenAI/Anthropics of the world WANT to contribute/participate in data standards rather than keep things proprietary is one of the most powerful levers we as a developer community collectively hold.

(At the same time we shoudl also watch out for companies extending/embracing/extinguishing standards... although honestly outside of Chrome I struggle to think of a truly successful example)

Indeed. My first reaction was:

> Files are the source of truth—the apps would reflect whatever’s in your folder.

Now that the "app" is a web site that supports itself with advertising revenue, it has no incentive whatsoever to work this way.

I think that's an overly charitable take. Giving Google/MSFT/OpenAI/Anthropic what they want does not guarantee a return on dividends. Standards are nice, but Apple is a giant testament to the fact that all the standards in the world won't move an adequately entrenched business.