I Disagree.
Let me get to the root of your problem. "you can replace any Angular developer with any other Angular developer"
Every good company has their own UI library/version of a UI library and their own coding standards. So as far as UI goes components looks the same everywhere. Same goes for all the required libraries that a developer might use. Everything is standardized, so every React project in a company looks the same as every other react project. So, In a company you can replace every React dev with every other Web developer (irrespective of their stack since learning React from scratch is way too easy). This whole article wasn't thought out at all.
Your article is relevant to the companies which are not primarily software companies but rather use software for automating the processes. Sure leave Microsoft out of this. But last time I checked/worked at AB Inbev it was selling Alcohol and was using a port of a very famous UI library for their softwares.
OK, God bless AB then I presume. Most companies are like "we need some stuff, get some devs to implement it" - 6 months later they realise the mistake they did ... :/
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers.
I Disagree.
Let me get to the root of your problem. "you can replace any Angular developer with any other Angular developer"
Every good company has their own UI library/version of a UI library and their own coding standards. So as far as UI goes components looks the same everywhere. Same goes for all the required libraries that a developer might use. Everything is standardized, so every React project in a company looks the same as every other react project. So, In a company you can replace every React dev with every other Web developer (irrespective of their stack since learning React from scratch is way too easy). This whole article wasn't thought out at all.
Where on Earth have you been the last decades ...? :D
If the above was true, I would be inclined to partially agree, however I have never seen such a company myself :)
Microsoft, Amazon, AB Inbev, Siemens. Do you need more examples?
Not one of these companies are relevant for the article I wrote. Read it once more ... ;)
Your article is relevant to the companies which are not primarily software companies but rather use software for automating the processes. Sure leave Microsoft out of this. But last time I checked/worked at AB Inbev it was selling Alcohol and was using a port of a very famous UI library for their softwares.
OK, God bless AB then I presume. Most companies are like "we need some stuff, get some devs to implement it" - 6 months later they realise the mistake they did ... :/