@JacksonZheng_@Blender I know it, Blender's devs are super open to public opinions
I don't think I have enough deep knowledge to present a good output and I'm not fast enough to catch these things before launch
As user, my decision was to let them flow and stick with works for me
@halvawawa@Blender How I couldn't be vague having 280 characters to express my opinion about software development?
I'm trying my best and anyone who want can tell me what they think about my thoughts
That's why I'm talking. I still loving and using Blender, and still trusting in the Foundation...
@JacksonZheng_@Blender It's not something critical or excluding at all and they needed to make this hard decision to improve the software.
That's why I use the versions 3.4, 3.6 and 4.5...
But it's open source, anyone who wants can fork it and make what's better for they. Not a problem at all
@JacksonZheng_@Blender For example, in 4.2 they changed some internal workings that made the previous versions less compatible with this version and newer. For .blend files, plugins and hardware requirements.
As dev I fully understand it needed some modernization, but it cuts the "accessibility" to it.
@Blender Blender it's a GPL software, so we don't need to worry at all
But since the boom of popularity around version 3.6, the "common user" and the "accessibility" became less a thing than it was before
But I still trust in the Foundation's decisions
@Blender If the Blender Foundation keep focusing in their goals and not letting the "top donators" rule over their priorities, everything will be okay.
But since 4.2 I have some questions about why some decisions was made since they doesn't help the community, only big players...
And I need to say that I felt in love with the Vue community
For a Rubyst like me, this community-driven approach, the tutorials, the extensions, the principles... All this things makes me feel like I'm home
Metaphorically-digitally embraced β€οΈ
Yeah, you can see me as a really strange dev...
I know I have some peculiar preferences, but in my head they make total sense!
In this case, I couldn't say I'm a Fullstack Dev if I don't give equal emphasis to Frontend and Backend, they should walk side by side!
At this point, I just finished the routing and the basic features of my blog
The only thing I still need to do is the styling, what I really like to do. That's also why I'm using sass.
So I choose what I think is the best js framework for my use cases, Vue.js
And I genuinely enjoy almost everything in Vue, maybe it's because the Philosophy remembers me Ruby, even writing JavaScript...
It's kinda refreshing for the js environment, specially for a gaijin like me
Summarizing my Blog Quest:
- I wanted to make a blog
- I used to code some things when teenager, so I was thinking this task should be easy these days
- I choose to not use php (I have some trauma) so I choose Rails, the best framework I knew
- I started coding my blog
Well, if I want to update myself I need to keep up with the technology
But I still thinking:
Why these things exists? PHP does it out of the box!
They hate PHP more than I do?
Why these gigantic js libraries exists? This really was the best solution available?