In light of today's Node/Electron Conversation, it seems appropriate to remind everyone of the t-shirts I made last week.
(cc: @alphakamp)
@ajroach42 I'm curious about the node/electron conversation, but couldn't find it.
I am a bit pro Electron though, so :P.
@dmoonfire Basically, node's ecosystem is bad and encourages bad habits.
Electron has all of the problems of webapps + the massive memory usage of running multiple web browsers at the same time + all the security worries of running multiple outdated web browsers at the same time.
@ajroach42 I found npm to be one of the better ecosystems out there, at least in terms of use (though high on fragmentation) and being self-contained verses global (composer, easy_install).
As for it being a pig, yeah, but there aren't a lot of good cross-platform, non-network-connected options out there.
@dmoonfire ... NPM was responsible for the left-pad debacle a few years back.
I've installed applications that pull dependencies only to discover that those dependencies either 1) don't work with the current version of that application or 2) have been modified to introduce phone-homes or other nastiness.
The biggest bit, though, is that node is probably great as a developer's environment, but it's horrible from a maintenance/admin standpoint.
And maintenance/admin is what I do.
@dmoonfire I'm sure it's great for developers, because I see so many Neat things being made with it.
But I can't really trust those things. They are hard to maintain, and they break often.
@ajroach42 It is nice to avoid the DLL Hell that Windows and even Linux has had over the years though. I really like folder-self-contained projects, that is why I'm using NPM and NuGet as my role models for Author Intrusion.
Also, because I used to use Python and Perl with my publishing framework and two years of deployment bitrotted my old novel's publication. :(
That was... frustrating to say the least. I want to be able to freeze a project at a point in time.