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bwilliams

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The Inverted Reactivity Model of React

chrlschn.dev
1 points·by bwilliams·il y a 6 mois·0 comments

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bwilliams
·le mois dernier·discuss
I think that's a factor for sure, but is less important (generally) as the price gap increases. The Steam Deck also has a disadvantage in that only some of your existing library will be playable on the device.

There's definitely a price point for some where it will make sense to rebuild your library on the Switch vs pay the higher cost of a Deck.
bwilliams
·le mois dernier·discuss
I love my Steam Deck aside from the quality control issues I ran into, one of which required an RMA. It's really hard to justify $1000 for it when the Switch 2 is $450 (soon $500).

I do think there's a bright future for PC handhelds, especially when (not if) ARM processors can be utilized. I'm less sure about that if prices keep rising since that quickly becomes the difference between niche hobbyist device and mainstream gaming portable.
bwilliams
·il y a 2 mois·discuss
Same. It’s the best ebook experience I’ve had so far despite its size and I’ve tried a myriad of ereaders.

The only missing feature is a backlight for reading at night.
bwilliams
·il y a 9 mois·discuss
There's definitely a number of reasons, but I vividly remember _struggling_ with Ember data at the time. The framework itself was already complicated and the data management story felt immature and rigid in addition to complex. That definitely pushed me towards and a number of others towards backbone and eventually React.
bwilliams
·il y a 9 mois·discuss
> The best part about blog feeds? It's just an idea. There's no central authority. There's no platform.

I think this is blessing _and_ a curse. I had an idea that I built a while back that centralizes RSS feeds so you get the centralized benefits of social media while authors can own and control their own content.

If anyone's curious, I built it out here: https://onread.io but I never had the time to really share it out or push it beyond the SUPER basic MVP that it currently is. I was thinking about pivoting it more into a tool that I could turn into an RSS feed for myself, but I haven't found the time, really.

Either way, I don't think RSS feeds as-is are as useful as they once were, and social media still has significant value over feeds due to conversation, sharing of content to folks with similar taste and interests, etc.