I don't think I would side with the conclusion. It's a worthwhile article to get a better idea of the pain points around htmx.
Excellent point, we made the web too complex for regular users. This is actually an issue in term of access and democracy for people to write content there.
Interesting proposals, let's see how far they go. They could bring most of the benefits of htmx and similar straight in HTML.
As it gets more adoption people are figuring out ways to use htmx properly and not abuse what should be niche features.
Excellent clip for the W3C 30th anniversary. Shows the big milestones and evolution of the WWW.
This is indeed an interesting new CSS selector. Opens the door to doing more in a declarative way and with less Javascript.
Looks like an interesting tool to have in the box for 2D effects on the web.
A good list to design HTML forms. The bar is indeed high and there's value in simplicity.
It's good to see servo getting closer to being usable in a browser. Makes me dream of Falkon or Konqueror being resurrected with Servo as the engine.
Interesting reason which would explain the Selenium flakiness. It's just harder to write tests with race conditions using Playwright.
With all those bots and scripts crawling the Web, some of the semantic web vision got silently implemented.
It's better than no feedback. It's a bit lazy and far from perfect though.
Interesting series about the rise of the javascript frontend framework, the bad practices which came with them and the very real impacts on the users. There are indeed better ways.
A new HTML attribute to keep an eye on. I can expect people to abuse it with hard to debug problems in the frontend if you don't know it is there.
Yes, please let's increase the market share of non-Chromium based browsers.
Interesting approach to structure CSS custom properties. Should help a bit with maintainability.
This is bad for two reasons: 1) people clearly put too much trust in random CDNs to distribute their dependencies and 2) people don't track depencendies obsolescence properly.
Very nice piece. Hopefully it'll push people to remember that the big social media enclosures are not really the Web. We can have more democracy on the Web again if we collectively want to.
Looks like a nice CSS library for the semantic styling of web content.
We're still fairly dependent on just two major web indices... time for an index built as a common for everyone to use?