
slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell") wrote:
It was accelerated by people who sold all of this on the back of "better UX". And that's still the right yardstick: does this technology, in general, lead to better user experiences?
Obviously not. The less React (and Angular, etc.) there is in your stack, the better the UX is for *most* types of products, *most* of the time. Not a hard and fast rule, but a useful proposition to work through to understand a specific case.