Doesn't it say something about JavaScript, dissatisfaction with it, and the overwhelmingly splintered ecosystem, when every comment is suggesting alternatives to the solution in the article?
I guess we chalk this one up to "neat if you're a hobbyist or solo dev with no maintenance handover, but generally commercially unviable."
I guess we chalk this one up to "neat if you're a hobbyist or solo dev with no maintenance handover, but generally commercially unviable."