← Back to context Comment by dbdr 6 days ago Amazing to see a webpage "Updated Dec 1998" still up, running and displaying correctly. 5 comments dbdr Reply madduci 6 days ago Without fancy JS or CSS, sites can last decades easily spankalee 6 days ago With JS and CSS sites can last decades easily. mikestorrent 6 days ago Agreed, it's not those, it's the fact that we went from JS being a little sprinkling of dynamism on a document to an entire build process with massive numbers of dependencies and browser shims. The web feels like a mistake as a platform... madduci 5 days ago I said "fancy", meaning frameworks or custom things. With vanilla js everything is durable k4rnaj1k 6 days ago [dead]
madduci 6 days ago Without fancy JS or CSS, sites can last decades easily spankalee 6 days ago With JS and CSS sites can last decades easily. mikestorrent 6 days ago Agreed, it's not those, it's the fact that we went from JS being a little sprinkling of dynamism on a document to an entire build process with massive numbers of dependencies and browser shims. The web feels like a mistake as a platform... madduci 5 days ago I said "fancy", meaning frameworks or custom things. With vanilla js everything is durable k4rnaj1k 6 days ago [dead]
spankalee 6 days ago With JS and CSS sites can last decades easily. mikestorrent 6 days ago Agreed, it's not those, it's the fact that we went from JS being a little sprinkling of dynamism on a document to an entire build process with massive numbers of dependencies and browser shims. The web feels like a mistake as a platform... madduci 5 days ago I said "fancy", meaning frameworks or custom things. With vanilla js everything is durable
mikestorrent 6 days ago Agreed, it's not those, it's the fact that we went from JS being a little sprinkling of dynamism on a document to an entire build process with massive numbers of dependencies and browser shims. The web feels like a mistake as a platform...
madduci 5 days ago I said "fancy", meaning frameworks or custom things. With vanilla js everything is durable
Without fancy JS or CSS, sites can last decades easily
With JS and CSS sites can last decades easily.
Agreed, it's not those, it's the fact that we went from JS being a little sprinkling of dynamism on a document to an entire build process with massive numbers of dependencies and browser shims. The web feels like a mistake as a platform...
I said "fancy", meaning frameworks or custom things. With vanilla js everything is durable
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