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by ramesh31 736 days ago
>This makes writing a compiler or writing an OS kernel look like child's play.

Indeed. The modern web browser is the single most advanced, complex, and highly developed piece of software that 99% of people will ever interact with, and we treat it as a given. Having a highly performant fully sandboxed VM that runs on every system imaginable in billions of devices used by nearly every human on earth is the single greatest triumph of software engineering ever, perhaps only second to the Linux kernel.

1 comments

> used by nearly every human on earth

Roughly 60% of earth's population used the internet in 2023. So not quite nearly every human.

25% of the Earth's population is younger than 15. Assuming 20% of them use the internet, the TAM (not including the <15 year olds) is 80% of the world's population.

3 out of 4, or 75%, seems like nearly ever human, I'd say (though it is a matter of opinion I guess.)

Indeed it is a matter of opinion.

Much like the cliché "the internet is the sum of all human knowledge".

If you have deep specialist knowledge in a field that has existed for more than thirty years it can become quite obvious that the internet really in is nowhere near "the sum" of our knowledge.

If we exclude over 75 with no interest in using it (and no use case for it in their environmnent/culture), and under 10, we're pretty close to covering all the rest.

And even the 60% is some hand wavy estimate about internet reach, about people using the internet frequently. More people use the internet than that, some transparently through some smartphone app or basic feature phone, which almost everybody has even in the poorest places in Africa.

Lol at under 10 and over 75 having no interest. I know avid users … content creators… in both categories.
Lol at you missing the qualifier "and no use case for it in their environmnent/culture".

Everybody knows avid users at 75+ or 10-, you haven't discovered something knew. But there are whole countries/areas/cultures where e.g. the majority of 75+ have no internet use, and no interest in getting any. You know, in the world, not in the US.

I think "nearly every human" is a bit more hand wavy than the 60% statistic.