statistically no. people who write their websites in pure html + css are busy reading classic literature, learning to windsurf, and hiking with their families, since they don't have to upgrade their build stack from version 14.5.75 to 15.1.200 every three weeks
Consumers are demanding so many features in modern cars that it would be almost impossible to have a physical button for everything.
Car maker Ineos tried this with their 2024 Grenadier and ended up like a 747 cockpit. Good luck finding the button you want while driving.
Yes, I understand that normies don’t understand what a URL is.
Most developers don’t understand what a URL is.
But if you take the URL out of the browser location bar we are going to burn this thing to the ground.
You’d be shocked how complex a web form can be.
I’m looking at a simple web form with 5 fields that uses:
useState
useEffect
Redux
React Query
React Hook Form
I’m trying to trace the data flow and my head is spinning.
Satoshi Nakamoto wrote code that was not usual. He had many quirks. We can find him by comparing his code with others, but no one did that yet.
When I first saw their code, I thought "Satoshi is not a programmer" because of how weird it was. He didn't follow normal code
A modern URL bar (in @diabrowser):
• Page Title not "/2025/12/seo-spam" gibberish
• Space on both sides of "/" for readability
• Hover to reveal & edit URL
• Emphasize domain for trust+security
Dia isn't just AI. It's refined browser basics too, @browsercompany style.