• it’s easier to build traditional, JavaScript-powered on-page interactions as small, linked HTML pages.

    If you require JS for critical interactions, then you should stop doing JS.

  • Yeah, for personal projects, I’ve been going back to just HTML, CSS, and some “HTML Web Components” for progressive enhancement where needed. The complicated build process and bloated frameworks of modern JS web development just feels wrong to me. JS has enough features now, where you don’t even need libraries like JQuery.