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by laurent92
1534 days ago
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> probably doesn’t have enough resources to maintain both. So why break a perfectly functional feature, if they are on a tight line? Just to compete with Notion.io? Stop trying to gob the next market when you don’t have enough resources to maintain your own stack. Remember when Ubuntu created the Unity desktop and made all Gnome users angry, just to try to gob the mobile/tablet market? I’ve tried to use it for 2 years and left. Is Ubuntu the OS of any mobile phone today? |
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Basically WP did not want to cede control over something as essential as the editing experience to a bunch of third parties, but it was happening because of the limitations of the classic editor.
I have issues with some elements of how they approached the problem but doing nothing would have been a worse choice. I can't say that I've seen a simple, blog-like project where using Gutenberg was a big negative. The classic editor will probably always be around, it's just a wrapper around TinyMCE and there's tons of community interest in keeping it alive.