I am so opposed to webassemblies that I don't want to work on them. Web assemblies if widespread will encourage the trend towards breaking the web by making URLs meaningless, and will promote more closed silos and data hiding. I do see that they could be very good in non-web use, but that's not enough for me to want to help it all happen.
On Thursday, September 3, 2020 at 7:59:08 AM UTC-4, Edward K. Ream wrote: > > As part of my "what's next for Leo" project, I decided to check in on > what's new with webassembly. Here is my google trail: > > webAssembly: https://webassembly.org/ > > non-web Embeddings (because Leo doesn't run on the web): > https://webassembly.org/docs/non-web/ > > WebAssembly High-level goals: https://webassembly.org/roadmap/ From the > table I found... > > wasmer: https://docs.wasmer.io/ > > wasmtime: https://wasmtime.dev/ > > I had heard of neither wasmer nor wasmtime before. > > The last link is the jackpot. Please take a look at Lin Clark's video. The > video doesn't waste your time. Instead, it pulls you along and invites you > to study more deeply. There is a ton of stuff I don't know here. Following > all the breadcrumbs might be a good way to become an experienced web > developer. I'll be studying her blog posts next. > > Edward > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "leo-editor" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/leo-editor/eddec80e-0237-47ed-8554-53de15a9f60do%40googlegroups.com.
