| Very similar conclusions to what I got to. Just a couple of days ago I watched this video on YT - Designing Tide by Yoshua Wuyrts [1] and I really loved everything about tide. On the other hand, it seems that this guy was (is) sponsored by Microsoft for working on these things, which is a red flag. Not that I am against something sponsored by them, but having a framework maintained by pretty much a one person-team at Microsoft seems like it could end any time if some manager decides there is no budget for "Rust web research" anymore. But I have also asked myself - how mature is tide now, and how much development does it really need? I can't answer, since I have used it only very little, over the last days. I am curious if somebody else, more in the know, would explain. So the question really is - Could tide, as it is now, be considered mature enough such that it does not matter who maintains it (if even)? If so, then it might be the perfect framework. Anything extra could be developed as additional packages on top of it. Plus, it could always go through a revival (somebody else forking it and continuing to add features)? [1] - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=laJA4QCjmxk |