The feudal lords also dit not have giga-yachts, enough wealth to buy social media companies and own about 50 politicians.
Thats what we see when we see you smokers. Sucking on the teet of substance dependance.
Its not about the UI, its about the decisions the dev team makes.


You might want to add a little /s there.
But yes, decisions made by people who dont pay for their own hardware.
Make it do less, a LOT faster, using less resources, with good extension support.
That is a good browsers only job.
Aimed to duplicate a cup of eternal youth, ends up making an equally awesome bag of holding.
People who are forced to use it because web developers have abandoned non chrome based browsers in their testing and validation.
When working in a 100 degree server room on some solar batteries (AC was still being installed), sitting on the floor in your sweaty underwear and pants will give an 52V positive terminal a path to ground, though the contents of your underwear.
Unfortunately it was significantly on the pain side of the pain/pleasure scale of my nether region.
This is why you should always give your developer "free dev time" where they work on what they feel like, or what they think is important outside of the approved scope.
They have fun and will likely fix something your players will be asking for.
Someone is going to stream that 0.1% run on twitch and market the hell out of your game. Just look at Luality that completed dark souls with a DDR dancepad.
The main problem is 3rd party advertising. If the New York Times ran ads on their website like they did with the physical newspaper, we would not have this problem.
Publishers need to take direct responsibility for every ad on their platform.
This is amazing news. It's like being shown that Neutonian physics are wrong, so now we have the ability to come up with a better model, then massive advancements in technology can occur.
In my assessment, all browsers suck badly at performance and resource usage at the moment.
How does a 25mb website content result in 350mb of ram usage for that tab? And why would it not render basically instantly.
I am old enough to remember in the early 2000s, when page loads were near instant. Even for large e-commerce and social media websites.