Thanks for the writeup. I really admire Ryan Dahl and am rooting for him and for Deno. It is hard for me to see how it will gain mainstream adoption without a "killer feature". While all of these features are good (maybe even great) incremental improvements I am afraid they won't be enough.
The article is well written and polished but looks like you forgot to add a source that you wanted to add:
Server-less adoption is at this moment doubling every year(add a source here).
Senior Fullstack Engineer with 10+ years of proven track record of delivering software at scale in startup and enterprise environments. I am most comfortable working across the stack with JavaScript,
Spot on Isaac: Deno is still missing that one "killer feature" that would make up for the cost of switching. At the same time, it does offer a glimpse of what the future will look like.
Maybe it will just end up as a "research" space fo the community in order to improve Node.
Thanks for the writeup. I really admire Ryan Dahl and am rooting for him and for Deno. It is hard for me to see how it will gain mainstream adoption without a "killer feature". While all of these features are good (maybe even great) incremental improvements I am afraid they won't be enough.
The article is well written and polished but looks like you forgot to add a source that you wanted to add:
Spot on Isaac: Deno is still missing that one "killer feature" that would make up for the cost of switching. At the same time, it does offer a glimpse of what the future will look like.
Maybe it will just end up as a "research" space fo the community in order to improve Node.
Thx for the tip adding the source. Cheers!
Deno Compile, that's probably the feature that will pay off the investment.