I can't wait for his reaction to Theo explaining why this is the thing he's excited for this technology until his next video where he completely walks back his praise and Prime applauds him for his nuanced take.
the QA is the most honest, down to earth, getting an understanding of the feeling in the team behind this beautiful product I've seen - very glad to have experienced it! Kudos for all the great work
Never looked at Deno because I’m married to Node from college through my job but wow. This video here swayed me a ton and I will certainly be giving it a try and using it for something immediately
As Dart's tools fan boy, I had switched to deno few months ago and very satisfied for deployment including all configs in single json, handling JSR with npm: supports with very fast LSP is awesome all the time. hot reloading for fresh is only complaint to me. hope remove all of node_module things in my astro project.
Very nice to have an introduction of the team. You did great job! I started to use deno since npm compatibility and it's getting better at fast pace. Thank you for simplifying the dev experience.
Congratulations to the whole team, the presentation was incredible! I was very happy with what I saw and I will definitely use Deno in my projects, I wish everyone success!
The "advertisement" at the start of this is HILARIOUS! Absolutely excellent work! Even better than when "Gunther and Hans" told me about Delphi back in 1996. ... I really don't want to have a `package.json` ... that's one of the things I joyously threw away when I came over to Deno.... BUT it's going to be terrific to try and convince a project manager to move.
I'm using Deno through their Deno deploy service, and I'm loving it ❤🎉 you can set up an API so easily and so quickly, I can't wait try Deno 2 new possibilities 😊
Intro killed it! You know some is serios when they take the time to do it like this. The entire production is spectacular! Great job guys! Btw, the production sold deno for me as a ts dev!
As a Rust developer who needs to embed a JavaScript runtime with Nodejs support into my application, I would love to see the embedding story improved. I know the core Deno runtime can be embedded relatively easily but embedding Deno with Nodejs support is quite challenging - at least with Deno 1.x.
I’m so excited. I’ve been having a tough time with where I’m at in my development career. Seeing other developers push the limits is exciting and inspiring to younger developers.
This is the true 1.0 release. Actually considering integrating it to our monorepo now. Jupyter notebooks in TS is a gamechanger for quick internal tooling. Great !
First time seeing deno in action, the way it approaches to security and having standard project setups are a big plus. Hoping there is no caching issues in dependency management. Thinking about giving a try.
I am glad to see backwards compatibility (Deno vs Node/ NPM), IMHO this was very much needed. Now I'd like to bring up the other face of the coin: with the Python 2.x transition to Python 3.x, still 10y later large companies (Fortune 500) still used Python 2.0. Please *do nudge* things forward.
Definitely cool. I will add this to my toolbox for sure. Never used Deno but this along with NestJS and GoLang feels like I can cover a lot server side.
Haven't been in the JS/TS ecosystem for a while, but quite excited for this. Think I'll take a few of my golang backend sideprojects and try them out using Deno.
The toolchain offered by deno seemed better than void(0) because deno is offering a runtime, compiler, linter, formater, package manager all in one. This is very similar to the experience we get with Go and Rust, a unified toolchain.
Why to settle with 2X performance with Deno, when you can have 4X performance with Bun? But great marketing video. I run my node server with read only file system in docker, so node permission system is fine for me. Specially, when Deno is going into Enterprise direction. In future it may put some advanced feature behind paywall.
Thanks Ryan Dhal and co. Excited about this software release. Interested to use Deno2 to build a lot of projects in my bucket. I hope it's going to provide more jobs opportunities for people like me 😊. Thanks again 👍😊
I keep trying to figure out the 5541 days. That's August 8 2009, if counted from the day of the stream. Node.js *did* come out that year, in May as far as I could find, but I've found nothing of interest about that particular date...