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Poetry Of Code
Poetry Of Code

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Frameworks for Humans in the Age of Machines

Yesterday I attended “Frameworks for Humans in the Age of Machines,” a talk by Rich Harris, the founder of Svelte.

The talk explored a big question: as more engineering work shifts to AI agents and automation, what is left for humans to do? Rich’s answer was simple and reassuring a lot. He spoke about building tools that feel good to use, cutting unnecessary complexity, and creating frameworks that work with developers instead of fighting them.

Rich also shared that he began his career in journalism before moving into tech. That background clearly shaped his focus on clarity, storytelling, and communication in software. You can see this mindset deeply reflected in Svelte’s philosophy: simple ideas, clear intent, and tools designed for humans.

Svelte is turning 10 years old this year, which is a lifetime in web development, and it was born in Brooklyn, making the moment especially meaningful for a NYC audience. Svelte has been gaining popularity thanks to its no virtual DOM, compile-time optimization, small bundle sizes, and clean, readable syntax. It feels closer to real-world development, built on standard HTML, CSS, and JavaScript.

A fun fact: the word Svelte literally means fast, lean, flexible, smart, and elegant, exactly what the framework aims to be.

Rich closed with a quote that perfectly summed up Svelte's philosophy:

We would rather have a thing that a small number of people love than a thing a large number of people tolerate.

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