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Okay, for the sake of the argument, let's assume at some point you amortize the fixed costs of native compilation down to zero.

Tell me how running a native binary is inherently easier than opening a webpage?



To open a webpage you have first to run a native binary. So, running a native binary is necessarily easier than opening a webpage.


You are confusing "Number of steps" with "Easy".

They're also the same number of steps. If I tell my OS to open an `html` file, it opens a browser window.


If doing task B requires doing task A first, then doing task A is necessarily easier than doing task B.


I think you're confusing "simple" and "easy". One task vs two is simpler, yes.


The performance and user experience of a native binary is on a whole other level.


It's really not with wasm. Sure, there is a performance difference. It is not a "whole other level".


The user experience is still on a whole other level, not living inside the browser. And the number of times I've used a wasm app, more than once, that actually had some theft do it. Well, I can't think of a single one. So, we will see how well it does in practice.

Wasm is great, but if the goal is to move native applications do the webb it isn't something I look forward to.




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