Instance: programming.dev
Joined: 6 months ago
Posts: 442
Comments: 79
London based software development consultant
Posts and Comments by codeinabox, codeinabox@programming.dev
Comments by codeinabox, codeinabox@programming.dev
Could you give more context about what Vercel features you need - is the site statically generated, or do you also need Vercel Functions?
There are several European based alternatives to Vercel. It’s also worth having a read through or posting to !web_hosting@programming.dev
Though that quote is followed by this, which indicates at least five of those vulnerabilities were real:
I searched the Linux kernel and found a total of five Linux vulnerabilities so far that Nicholas either fixed directly or reported to the Linux kernel maintainers, some as recently as last week:
Your comment reminded me of this article, The Software Quality and Productivity Crisis Executives Won’t Address, which discusses the lack of technical leadership when it comes to tackling technical debt, and that the solution is usually a rewrite.
Instead, most organisations don’t tackle technical debt until it causes an operational meltdown. At that point, they end up allocating 30–40% of their budget to massive emergency transformation programmes—double the recommended preventive investment (Oliver Wyman, 2024).
I have noticed the repository lacks CONTRIBUTING.md. If you want to set some rules about contributing, I would have added them there, instead of creating a Markdown file specific for agents. I’m very much of the philosophy that you should write documentation for humans, which has the added bonus that it will also be consumed by agents.
It’s definitely got the worst defaults compared to the alternatives.
pnpm, Bun, and Deno have all made better choices about their defaults. pnpm blocks postinstall scripts, Bun requires explicit opt-in for them, Deno’s permission model is restrictive by design.
I agree but it depends on how teams create and refine their tickets. For example, you could have high level tickets, and someone picks one up and creates an implementation that’s not an appropriate fit for your architecture.
Thank you for not assuming my motivations. Could you please elaborate on what you mean by “oneshotted”? I share a lot of articles, so I’m not surprised you recognise my username.
I don’t specifically seek them out. I follow quite a few different programming blogs, and I am just sharing what people are posting about, and it just so happens a lot of people are posting about this topic.
Headless does not mean “no screen anywhere.” It means you are not required to use the company’s app or site to finish the job.
You might say: “Book a flight and a hotel in Tokyo.” A helper (with hooks into services, e.g. MCP or other agent APIs) talks to airlines and hotels for you. You might never see their homepage or their “join our club” popup.
Whilst I can see where the author is going with this, I can’t see some tasks, particularly booking concert tickets, being done by AI agents. Whilst it may be convenient for end users, it’s also open to exploitation by scalpers.
Looking at the credits at the bottom of the site, it was built by someone whose first language appears to be Italian.
When did we start judging developers on their graphic design skills? 🤔
If you’re going to make that claim, could you please provide some evidence.
I think you’re misconstruing the author’s argument, at no point does the author imply that Claude knows best, or that Electron apps are better. Their closing argument is certainly not an endorsement for Electron or AI slop.
Don’t get me wrong: writing this brings me no joy. I don’t think web is a solution either. I just remember good times when native did a better-than-average job, and we were all better for using it, and it saddens me that these times have passed.
I just don’t think that kidding ourselves that the only problem with software is Electron and it all will be butterflies and unicorns once we rewrite Slack in SwiftUI is not productive. The real problem is a lack of care. And the slop; you can build it with any stack.
Imagine being such a slop-brainwashed fanboi
Do you have any evidence for this? Looking through the post, and the author’s other blog post titles, there is very little mention of AI or Claude.
Instead of throwing labels at the author, it’s much more worthwhile to discuss their key argument about the challenges of developing native apps.
I wonder if we’ll end up in a situation of open source projects with closed source tests. Though I don’t know how that would work, because how would you contribute a new feature if the tests are closed? 🤔
Check against Can I Use, all of the APIs, except for the following are supported by major browsers: - Synchronous Clipboard API only Safari has full support, the rest have partial - Temporal only currently supported in Chrome and Firefox
The fact that people even bring javascript as the backend is a bit crazy to me.
To clarify do you mean replacing JavaScript just on the backend? This article is about using JavaScript on the front end.
I’m intrigued, what would you replace it with?
What are your thoughts on this 2023 comparison?

c/Aii
Microsoft exec suggests AI agents will need to buy software licenses, just like employees (businessinsider.com)
Comments
How to hit your Claude weekly limit so you can go outside and touch grass (jola.dev)
Making Our Frontend Unit Tests Much Faster with @swc/jest (tech.small-improvements.com)
Introducing a new spam policy for "back button hijacking" (developers.google.com)
Pages that are engaging in back button hijacking may be subject to manual spam actions or automated demotions, which can impact the site’s performance in Google Search results. To give site owners time to make any needed changes, we’re publishing this policy two months in advance of enforcement on June 15, 2026.
March 2026 Baseline monthly digest (web.dev)
Squash and Stretch (joshwcomeau.com)
HTML in Canvas (mattrothenberg.com)
Anti-patterns in event modelling - Passive Aggressive Events (event-driven.io)
Open source was never about trust (opensourcesecurity.io)
fakecloud - Free, Open-Source LocalStack Alternative for AWS Testing (fakecloud.dev)
fakecloud is a free, open-source local AWS emulator for integration testing and local development. It runs on a single port (4566), requires no account or auth token, and aims to faithfully replicate AWS behavior.
AI models are terrible at betting on soccer—especially xAI Grok (arstechnica.com)
AI models from Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic lost money betting on soccer matches over a Premier League season, in a new study suggesting even the most advanced systems struggle to analyze the real world over long periods.
In defense of GitHub's poor uptime (evanhahn.com)
Could you give more context about what Vercel features you need - is the site statically generated, or do you also need Vercel Functions?
The DX shift no one noticed: Web interoperability (blog.logrocket.com)
These days, developer experience (DX) is often the strongest case for using JavaScript frameworks. The idea is simple: frameworks improve DX with abstractions and tooling that cut boilerplate and help developers move faster. The tradeoff is bloat, larger bundles, slower load times, and a hit to user experience (UX).
There are several European based alternatives to Vercel. It’s also worth having a read through or posting to !web_hosting@programming.dev
You can't cancel a JavaScript promise (except sometimes you can) (inngest.com)
On Vinyl Cache and Varnish Cache (vinyl-cache.org)
Comments
February 2026 Baseline monthly digest (web.dev)
Call your existing automation ‘zero-token architecture’ to become an instant agentic AI wiz (theregister.com)
As businesses drink the agentic AI Kool-Aid and go looking for productivity enhancements, IT professionals can deliver by rebranding their existing automations as “zero-token architecture,” according to Kelsey Hightower, a former Google distinguished engineer and a notable early promoter of Kubernetes.
Under the hood of MDN's new frontend (developer.mozilla.org)