According to wikipedia[1] the first industrial steam engine (1712) was invented almost 100 years before the invention of the steam locomotive (1804), arguably its greatest evolutionary feat.
For iOS Safari there's a few extensions that do the trick, search the app store for “dev tools” and theres quite a few relevant results. Personally I use web inspector and it works as advertised.
It does not cost $14 a month per user to run yt, they inject their music service into the price even if people don't want or need google music. $5 would've been fine esp. considering they don't produce any of their content and even subscribed users see ads/promotions added by the creators.
This is all fun and games until you work on a platform that requires dynamically loaded modules, error boundaries and suspense (or another form of components loading their own data) and then the no-nonsense approach falls flat.
It is easy to put your nose up towards bloated frameworks when you’re doing small (static) stuff but as soon as you need the bloat you’re just reinventing a wobbly wheel without one.
There’s always an air of disdain against front end frameworks on HN but people often project their own not-needing-a-framework on the tool itself.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_steam_engine