All is well; after all, Reddit is an incredibly complex ‘application’ that obviously needs a complex re-write every now and then. It’s not as if it could be built using plain vanilla SSR with a little client-side JS extra to deliver a great experience.
The question with these reliably terrible JS heavy rewrites is always "do the investors know?" Perhaps I should train boards and VCs to look for this sort of failure?

Jul 6, 2018 · 6:01 PM UTC

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Replying to @stilkov
Exactly my thoughts! It's amazing how much slower and more fragile all these rewrites are. But why noone pays any attention to these issues?