• xangadix@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    Hey, I’ve read exactly the same article 15 years ago, but back then it was Flash that “broke the web”.

    • Oisteink@feddit.nl
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      3 hours ago

      Flash never got in the way the same like js. My main take from the whole piece is how it has changed the way websites are developed, to match that of traditional software development. Like the need to deploy to change some text in the footer of our website

  • masterspace@lemmy.ca
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    5 hours ago

    Oh yeah, it’s totally JavaScript that’s the reason that news and magazine websites suck. It’s totally not the financial incentives of advertising that cause them to only care about the user experience so far as they get clicks. This totally wouldn’t have been the exact same result if new media did everything on the backend and underfunded their backend dev teams. /S

    Jesus Christ, why do these inane articles keep coming up? The authors have the reasoning skills of “when I look into the sun my eyes hurt, therefor the sun is bad”.

  • chromodynamic@piefed.social
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    7 hours ago

    Client-side scripting is a hack. HTML didn’t have all the tags people wanted or needed, so instead of carefully updating it to include new features, they demanded that browsers just execute arbitrary code on the user’s computer, and with that comes security vulnerabilities, excessive bandwidth use and a barrier-to-entry that makes it difficult to develop new browsers, giving one company a near-monopoly.

    • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      I’ve read it wasn’t a hack, but my memory is mixed and I’m as old as JavaScript.

      It was somewhat of a consensus that scriptability is needed. Java applets, Flash, Sun plans to add support for scripting webpages with Java, alternative plans for the same with TCL, Netscape plans for the same with some Lisp, and then they decided upon what became JS.

      A lot of things are scriptable and it is convenient. I’m not sure anyone expected this to be just used as a base for more and more complexity in an application platform. Probably the idea was that scripted hypertext pages will remain such, and in future there will be other dedicated technologies for other purposes.

      I’m fascinated with Java, just can’t concentrate on learning it. My idea of a wonder language would run on something like JVM (or like Forth machine, LOL) and be as terse and simple as TCL.

    • sbv@sh.itjust.works
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      6 hours ago

      Developers wanted to build and deploy apps to end user machines. The round trip for page loads was lousy for usability.

      Java applets were too shitty. Flash was too janky and hard to work with. So Mozilla started adding JavaScript as a hack. It filled a need.

      a barrier-to-entry that makes it difficult to develop new browsers,

      It definitely adds a barrier to entry, but JavaScript was really perfected in chromium, which is a different codebase from the folks who proposed and built js to begin with.

      I’m not saying JavaScript is good, but it fills a need.

    • cecilkorik@lemmy.ca
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      7 hours ago

      makes it difficult to develop new browsers, giving one company a near-monopoly.

      Totally an accident by the way! They weren’t trying to become a monopoly, promise!

      • miguel@fedia.io
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        6 hours ago

        Netscape? I don’t think it worked out for them, if that was the case :D

  • hisao@ani.social
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    7 hours ago

    I wonder if author were following JS-sphere for the past five years. There’s SSR everywhere, stuff like NextJS is very popular. Some might say it’s overused even. Like, “please consider not using SSR if you do admin panel because it’s all cool and everyone does it nowadays but we can do SPA faster and it’s internal-only product so we don’t really benefit from SSR that much”.