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by kg
296 days ago
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Yes. That is exactly how web standards work historically. If something will break 0.1% of the web it isn't done unless there are really really strong reasons to do it anyway. I personally watched lots of things get bounced due to their impact on a very small % of all websites. This is part of why web standards processes need to be very conservative about what's added to the web, and part of why a small vocal contingent of web people are angry that Google keeps adding all sorts of weird stuff to the platform. Useful weird stuff, but regardless. |
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Says who? You keep mentioning this 0.1% threshold yet…
1. I can’t find any reference to that do you have examples / citations?
2. On the contrary here’s a paper that proposes a 3x higher heuristic: https://arianamirian.com/docs/icse2019_deprecation.pdf
3. It seems there are plenty of examples of features being removed above that threshold NPAPI/SPDY/WebSQL/etc.
4. Resources are finite. It’s not a simple matter of who would be impacted. It’s also opportunity cost and people who could be helped as resources are applied to other efforts.