▲ | motorest 4 days ago | |||||||
> Explain what about Gmail is "highly interactive" because I'm genuinely not seeing it. That's perfectly fine. If you can't see it, you can't see it. You need to know what to look for to see it, though. If you're oblivious to web development then every page is just a page. > You receive like an email a minute? Irrelevant. The range of operations that Gmail supports and falls within the lazy classification of CRUD operations goed way beyond sending and receiving emails. For example, see gmail's support for tagging, email classification, multiple types of inboxes, etc. > It's literally basic web 2.0 junk from the early 2000s (...) Tell me you're completely clueless about web development and WebApps in general without actually saying it. Just keep in mind that you also have the option of not commenting on things you're oblivious about. | ||||||||
▲ | Alejandro9R 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Yeah, he's completely clueless and has been commenting like he knows what he is talking about. Or is rage baiting on purpose. Sometimes its impressive the lengths people can go. Nonetheless, I've seen so many people on Hacker News beg for "simple websites" and that they are just "CRUD apps that don't need complexity" while completely dismissing what you've pointed out in the previous comment. Of course, there are webs which are developed with the worst practices and bloated to oblivion. But even the best websites with the greatest UI/UX and perceived performance will have at least some complexity to it to give that experience to the end user. UX and simplicity done right is really a craft that mixes creativity, human psychology and technical skill. | ||||||||
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▲ | ndriscoll 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||
My memory is getting hazy, but wasn't Gmail originally just (something like) the simple HTML version, and it supported tags and classification from the beginning? Like I'm pretty sure I had filters to tag and skip inbox for newegg emails circa 2005 so I could have a separate "inbox" for them. Likewise for some mailing lists I was part of. | ||||||||
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▲ | robertlagrant 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
> Tell me you're completely clueless about web development and WebApps in general without actually saying it. Just keep in mind that you also have the option of not commenting on things you're oblivious about. Petty sniping is not welcome. |