I've come across more terrible articles (even on dev.to) but "the ability to create both desktop and mobile applications" yeah that seems a bit ... uninformed?
The good thing is that the author mentions that these are the preferred choices of her company's developers, although it would be even better to mention that at the start of the article :-)
The weirdest thing for me was that the article starts off by showing a chart of "most popular technologies" and then goes on to list a bunch of the most unrelated tech you can imagine, from game engines and big data platforms and from devops tools to mobile development frameworks ...
What knowledge do I gain from that, or what purpose could possibly be served by this bizarre apples and oranges collection? It would obviously be way more interesting to show how node.js compares to other web app backend frameworks (i.e. same category) like Rails or Laravel and so on.
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I've come across more terrible articles (even on dev.to) but "the ability to create both desktop and mobile applications" yeah that seems a bit ... uninformed?
The good thing is that the author mentions that these are the preferred choices of her company's developers, although it would be even better to mention that at the start of the article :-)
The weirdest thing for me was that the article starts off by showing a chart of "most popular technologies" and then goes on to list a bunch of the most unrelated tech you can imagine, from game engines and big data platforms and from devops tools to mobile development frameworks ...
What knowledge do I gain from that, or what purpose could possibly be served by this bizarre apples and oranges collection? It would obviously be way more interesting to show how node.js compares to other web app backend frameworks (i.e. same category) like Rails or Laravel and so on.