> I think the Web is great, I think interactive dynamic stuff is great, and I think the progress we’ve made in the last decade is great. I also think it’s great that the Web is and always has been inherently customizable by users, and that I can use an extension that lets me decide ahead of time what an arbitrary site can run on my computer.
> What’s less great is a team of highly-paid and highly-skilled people all using Chrome on a recent Mac Pro, developing in an office half a mile from almost every server they hit, then turning around and scoffing at people who don’t have exactly the same setup.
And later on:
> I’m not saying that genuine web apps like Google Maps shouldn’t exist — although even Google Maps had a script-free fallback for many years, until the current WebGL version! I’m saying that something has gone very wrong when basic features that already work in plain HTML suddenly no longer work without JavaScript. 40MB of JavaScript, in fact, according to about:memory
Doesn't seem to be a JS specific criticism, testing application performance on typical user hardware is a key responsibility of QA regardless of the language or platform.
This is a really common problem in tech. Smaller companies adopt large company strategies that require more resources than the small company has to do correctly.
> I think the Web is great, I think interactive dynamic stuff is great, and I think the progress we’ve made in the last decade is great. I also think it’s great that the Web is and always has been inherently customizable by users, and that I can use an extension that lets me decide ahead of time what an arbitrary site can run on my computer.
> What’s less great is a team of highly-paid and highly-skilled people all using Chrome on a recent Mac Pro, developing in an office half a mile from almost every server they hit, then turning around and scoffing at people who don’t have exactly the same setup.
And later on:
> I’m not saying that genuine web apps like Google Maps shouldn’t exist — although even Google Maps had a script-free fallback for many years, until the current WebGL version! I’m saying that something has gone very wrong when basic features that already work in plain HTML suddenly no longer work without JavaScript. 40MB of JavaScript, in fact, according to about:memory