Well-compensated, talented, and trusted in-house developers committed to making the framework the best it can be for all their client's use cases.
Either that or they're a part of their huge open source community which will still work tirelessly to make the framework better, even if Meteor isn't commercial viable and people move on to the next best thing.
I'm sure the truth is based more on who's in the room at the time than anything else.
Either that or they're a part of their huge open source community which will still work tirelessly to make the framework better, even if Meteor isn't commercial viable and people move on to the next best thing.
I'm sure the truth is based more on who's in the room at the time than anything else.