Kent Borg wrote on 2025-10-25 07:23:

which, to the writer of the thing I read, translated into they no
longer need a web server.

The term "serverless" has a meaning beyond "no server":

What is serverless computing?

Serverless computing is a method of providing backend services on an as-used 
basis. A serverless provider allows users to write and deploy code without the 
hassle of worrying about the underlying infrastructure. A company that gets 
backend services from a serverless vendor is charged based on their computation 
and do not have to reserve and pay for a fixed amount of bandwidth or number of 
servers, as the service is auto-scaling. Note that despite the name serverless, 
physical servers are still used but developers do not need to be aware of them.

https://www.cloudflare.com/en-ca/learning/serverless/what-is-serverless/



It has turned into an OS, kind of.

Indeed, and that's a Good Thing™.

If it weren't for JavaScript, HTML 5, and CSS, Linux would be a second class citizen on the internet.

Jitsi meetings would have us all struggling to run jitsi.exe in Wine.

Banking likewise with IE.exe. etc. ad nauseam.


The web has evolved into an application delivery mechanism and it cannot be overstated how good that is.

Perfect? No, but don't let that be the enemy of Good Enough.


One can now deliver their applications to all users; Mac, Windows, Linux, iOS, Android,... with one code base.

Updates take effect immediately.

Compiling, packaging, and distribution for a gazillion Linux derivatives plus other platforms, hardware, etc. is trivial by comparison to old "web 1.0" days.


The alternative is not forgotten - we've lived through it and it sucked.

Especially those of us with a fondness for running OS/2 back in the day.
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