It's not too much of a statement about React's efficiency, as you'll almost 
always see gains if you unroll framework code in that manner.  The disadvantage 
is you now have a landing page constructed from unrolled pieces of framework.  
Almost categorically, this is how good software development is done overall - 
unroll parts that need the highest performance, where you're willing to trade 
off maintainability for performance.

-Jeff
________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of Carlos 
Rovira <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, October 26, 2017 2:41 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Netflix removed React for plain JS to gain 50% performance improvement

I saw this on twitter, and think I could share here:

https://twitter.com/NetflixUIE/status/923374215041912833?s=09

"Netflix UI Engineers
Removing client-side React.js (but keeping it on the server)
resulted in a 50% performance improvement on our landing page"

IMOH, that's an huge stick for React, since performance always is one of
the main points

I think here Royale has a good opportunity if we can have javascript as
plain as we can and shows
a good performance in browsers.

What do you think?

--
Carlos Rovira
http://about.me/carlosrovira

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