YPYash Panchalinnitroide.hashnode.dev00A Decade of Browser Evolution, A Decade of Tooling Stagnation9h ago · 4 min read · If you want to understand the true pace of technological advancement, look at the web browser. Ten years ago, building a complex, highly interactive application within a browser window was a fragile eJoin discussion
YPYash Panchalinnitroide.hashnode.dev00Breaking the Cloud Dependency in Frontend Tooling2d ago · 3 min read · When we set out to build a new online frontend IDE, the conventional wisdom was clear: spin up Docker containers in the cloud, pipe the editor interface through WebSockets, and process the compute remJoin discussion
YPYash Panchalinnitroide.hashnode.dev00Breaking the Cloud Dependency in Frontend Tooling3d ago · 3 min read · When we set out to build a new online frontend IDE, the conventional wisdom was clear: spin up Docker containers in the cloud, pipe the editor interface through WebSockets, and process the compute remJoin discussion
YPYash Panchalinnitroide.hashnode.dev00Edge Compute: Engineering a Fast Online Code Editor4d ago · 2 min read · When mapping out the architecture for a new browser-based code editor, the industry default is universally understood: build a React frontend, connect it to a scalable Node.js backend, and execute theJoin discussion
YPYash Panchalinnitroide.hashnode.dev00Why We Stripped the Backend from Our Frontend Sandbox5d ago · 2 min read · When evaluating the architecture for a new browser-based code editor, the industry default is to heavily leverage cloud infrastructure. You build a React frontend, connect it to a scalable Node.js bacJoin discussion