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Yes, I found that annoying. But it's not uncommon when reading stuff written by programmers who make extensive use of JavaScript. For whatever reason it seems to have attracted people who don't have much breadth or depth of programming experience yet at the same time like to make grand statements.

It's interesting that the author, who is speaking about things that were happening 20 years ago, graduated from college in 2008 (http://www.chris-granger.com/resume/) and thus 20 years ago he was likely a very small child.

This combination of lack of depth and yet grandeur is seen in other projects and is annoying because it means that one is forced to wade through a lot of noise to understand projects like nodejs, couchdb, etc. And it does the people who write like that a disservice. Rather then overselling their weak knowledge they should point out the cool stuff in what they are doing and let that speak for itself. It's counterproductive to pretend to be smarter than you are.



I wouldn't necessarily pinpoint the Javascript community, but yes, I would agree that there does seem to be an awful lot of really young and frankly inexperienced developers who seem to have ridiculous delusions of grandeur and are completely ignorant of the rich history of brilliant and accomplished people who have explored the problem spaces they are also exploring.

I blame the whole Silicon Valley "10x hacker" mentality. There's a whole lot of young and frankly pretty mediocre developers strutting around thinking that because they (a) live in the valley and (b) built shittytodoapp.io they're at the same level as Knuth.


You are correct that I should not claim that the entire JavaScript community is like that, but that's where I've seen the most prevalent delusions of grandeur problem.


You don't realize the irony in what you said! You complain about JavaScript developers making grand statements and you are making a grand statement about ALL JavaScript developer!

tsk tsk tsk


A sweeping generalization is not the same as a grand statement.




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