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SLA breaches have consequences, no big conspiracy there


Not at all saying it's a conspiracy, I just think it's a lack of transparency.

I get why, but it would give me more confidence if they would tell me about everything.


I guess a dirty little secret might be that something is always acting up or being noisy and it would spam the status page completely.


They don't make more money by giving you more confidence in their systems.


> Does the code look pretty enough?

‘…readable, maintainable [and tested]’, ie. if someone else needs to modify or remove this code in the future, will there be friction?


I would love to hear from one of the Adobe team members about this. Are there separate React teams and WC teams? What’s that dynamic like? It feels like Photoshop on the web has been framed as ‘powered by web components’, rather than WCs being a minor detail. This post mentions “islands of React code” as if React is a legacy thing they have to put up with https://web.dev/ps-on-the-web/


I work on React Aria. Adobe is a big company and there are many teams using different technologies. In general, some very new parts of creative cloud chose to use web components, but the majority of teams are using React, and I don't foresee that changing anytime soon. It's definitely not a company wide shift if you got that impression from the Photoshop article. Ideally we'd collaborate more, but... big company silos.


Thanks for the response and great work on React Aria. That makes sense. To be honest the impression probably came more from tweets about the article than the article itself https://mobile.twitter.com/search?q=https%3A%2F%2Fweb.dev%2F...

I can see the appeal of web components when your interop issues are as large Adobe’s must be. On the other hand if huge portions of your apps are canvas / wasm then web components’ DOM-centric component model might feel awkward or constraining


They moved the Museum Art Hotel in Wellington in 1993. At 3000 tonnes it's half the weight of the Zurich building, but they moved it 120m, which is twice as far. Pretty impressive!

http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/news/wellington/9054381...


Interesting, did he mention any specifics? They seem to be aiming to create a general platform that's not specific to games. They also do have a few marketing / business managers which might be why it sounded like vapourware? As far as I can tell they have a lot of talent in the engineering department.


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