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by no_time
1369 days ago
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>a team may deem the initial performance impact of JS-dependence a worthy compromise for benefits they get in other areas, such as personalized content, server costs and simplicity, and even performance in long-lived sessions notice how all these "benefits" only benefit the developer at the expense of the user or have nothing to do with the problem at hand. "personalized content"? really? Pre client side Youtube,Twitter,FB,Reddit were all superior feats of engineering to their modern JS heavy counterparts. |
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