Why do you feel the need to be competitive? Isn't it enough to serve all
the existing users that appreciate the framework as it is?
Seems fine to me. And popularity is a pretty bad quality indicator IMHO,
especially when the source is the SO community.
On 2019-01-24 19:31, Chris Brody wrote:
Don't be discouraged. We've aways had some negativity.
I think this is just part of being the OG. Data analysis is a science, and
personally, I don't have a ton of faith in the science of this post.
On Fri, Jan 25, 2019 at 12:30 AM Oliver Salzburg
wrote:
> Why do you feel the need to be compe
Surveys are never really giving full overview of the community as they
represent views of the developers who are taking this survey.
The more reliable ways to see popularity is to check npm.js stats (for
usage) and github pulse (for community involvement).
If we compare react and cordova on npm we
I completely agree with Oliver. My personal opinion is when genius like
Nikola Tesla was under rated we need not worry much about popularity. As
long as we feel motivated to contribute to the framework and serve the end
users we should feel proud.
Regards,
Gandhi.
On Friday, January 25, 2019, Oli
I work on the WeVote.us non-profit voting tech project.
https://github.com/wevote/WebApp
About a year ago, I started a port of React to React Native -- some
people report 30% to 80% common code, but for us is was optimistically
10%. We are a small group of volunteers, who put most of our fron
Nightly build #982 for cordova has succeeded!
The latest nightly has been published and you can try it out with 'npm i -g
cordova@nightly'
For details check build console at
https://builds.apache.org/job/cordova-nightly/982/consoleFull
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