Evan, I think it's important that you physically make it to these events. I know Toronto is a long way from home but most of a conference is about connecting and that just doesn't happen over a video feed. Secondarily physical proximity produces accountability and focus on preparation that doesn't happen (as well intentioned as you are). The kickoff to this presentation was awkward, a primary focus on the past -- while intellectually interesting -- is not a good way to encourage excitement in the community. You're an amazing individual and a great presenter but this presentation was not up to your standard nor does it show a firm commitment to VueJS and encourages the idea that your focus has shifted to the larger ViteJS playing field. I still firmly believe VueJS is a 1st class SPA framework and still my favorite but effort needs to be made to stay relevant (when your name is not pronounced "React" and you're no longer the coolest kid on the block). I do get that as the SPA space matures, it's harder to be "sexy" in the change that's released but basic blocking and tackling needs to be executed on (which includes physical attendance of events). COVID made us all get used to work from home but also enabled lazy behavior (the latter we can't continue as we move forward). I don't know nearly enough about your day to day to say you're lack of attendance was lazy (my guess is it was not) but I will say with confidence that this year's talk was delivered with less enthusiasm and apparent preparation than those in the past. Your voice only sounded excited when you switched to ViteJS and IMHO the only emphasis ViteJS should get in a VueJS conference is how Vue integrates with it. I love ViteJS but it is a cross-platform tool and it's scope causes more problems than it solves.
@@junaga2 I've been a developer since 1979 and still am. Regarding talk show host reference you've got me at a loss. I guess I assume you were trying to make fun of me in some way but as it really makes no sense it kinda falls flat.
What i think many people of younger generations think is that anything but positive feedback is an attack. I don't want to presume too much but when I grew up well intentioned feedback was a gift and IMHO those who rise to the top in this world still typically hear it that way.
Great to get some insights & learnings of the Vue 2 to Vue 3 transition. 🙌
> vite has evolved from just a dev server to something that is much more significant.
I agree, it's the new core-js.
Evan, I think it's important that you physically make it to these events. I know Toronto is a long way from home but most of a conference is about connecting and that just doesn't happen over a video feed. Secondarily physical proximity produces accountability and focus on preparation that doesn't happen (as well intentioned as you are). The kickoff to this presentation was awkward, a primary focus on the past -- while intellectually interesting -- is not a good way to encourage excitement in the community. You're an amazing individual and a great presenter but this presentation was not up to your standard nor does it show a firm commitment to VueJS and encourages the idea that your focus has shifted to the larger ViteJS playing field. I still firmly believe VueJS is a 1st class SPA framework and still my favorite but effort needs to be made to stay relevant (when your name is not pronounced "React" and you're no longer the coolest kid on the block). I do get that as the SPA space matures, it's harder to be "sexy" in the change that's released but basic blocking and tackling needs to be executed on (which includes physical attendance of events).
COVID made us all get used to work from home but also enabled lazy behavior (the latter we can't continue as we move forward). I don't know nearly enough about your day to day to say you're lack of attendance was lazy (my guess is it was not) but I will say with confidence that this year's talk was delivered with less enthusiasm and apparent preparation than those in the past. Your voice only sounded excited when you switched to ViteJS and IMHO the only emphasis ViteJS should get in a VueJS conference is how Vue integrates with it. I love ViteJS but it is a cross-platform tool and it's scope causes more problems than it solves.
I feel like a dick for not being a cheerleader but someone needs to communicate the "what you could do better message"
Ironically, the only reason this video showed up in my feed was that I searched for ViteJS 5.0 and got nothing
no, no one cares. we are developers, not talkshow hosts.
@@junaga2 I've been a developer since 1979 and still am. Regarding talk show host reference you've got me at a loss. I guess I assume you were trying to make fun of me in some way but as it really makes no sense it kinda falls flat.
What i think many people of younger generations think is that anything but positive feedback is an attack. I don't want to presume too much but when I grew up well intentioned feedback was a gift and IMHO those who rise to the top in this world still typically hear it that way.
I still haven't forgiven you for breaking Vue 2 so bad with Vue 3. I really don't want to use it after the messup.
I really love V3, it's so much better and convenient
come on dude
Vue 3 and composition API way way way better than Vue 2. Open your eyes man...
i have switched to 3 and it doesn't seem THAT different...
vue 2 sucks ass in comparison to 3