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by anonzzzies
579 days ago
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Of course it is not. I see more clients moving back to it or moving to it for the first time. People, rightfully so imho, are starting to hate nextjs (and react is getting a bit of that). It is so much easier to get something running without errors in the logs, for years at a time, and without weird frontend bugs with laravel than it is with nextjs/react. And people are starting to see that; usually after having multiple projects in nextjs over the years, teams changed and disappeared and then someone redeploys, nothing works and there we are. |
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This is something you only begin to appreciate if you've been through a couple of economic recessions. Not everybody has money and manpower to keep their website up to date every other month! A well-built app for a typical business should be able to coast along through the lifetime of, say, an Ubuntu LTS release without much effort.