The English language has no words (yet) to capture that special combination of nausea and embarrassment one feels when they commit in good faith to reading a long piece of prose... only to slowly realize the whole thing is AI generated. But I'm feeling it more and more often these days.
Does that have something to do with OP's post, though? I mean, it's written like someone who's mostly formally familiar with English. Maybe your infamiliarity with formal English itself is factoring in, because the AIs are ALSO formal in diction?
I didn't get the same "AI wrote this" that you did, but I get a lot of people saying "AI wrote this" to stuff I definitely wrote by hand, all the way.
There's no objective measurement of “better”, which in itself refutes your argument, but I personally feels AI prose to be very annoying for mostly two reasons:
- it's the same everywhere. People could use AI to write in different styles by prompting and through few-shots learning, but they don't and as a result every AI generated prose looks like something I've already read. Its junk prose the same way way Mac Donalds is junk food.
- if someone doesn't make the effort of writing or even customizing the AI output, then what I'm reading is a low effort post and it's highly unlikely that I'm going to learn anything in the process. As a result as soon as I realize that I'm reading AI slop, I feel the immediate disappointment of having committed some time to reading something that wasn't worth my time.
> Historians will look back at all the silly dead humans in the past that icked and yucked about AI.
Like we look at the silly dead humans in the past who fought back against opium, cigarettes and leaded gasoline?
I might be missing something here, but I'm struggling to understand why the concept of mixing up implementation details by request path is desirable.
Maybe for colocating a legacy application with a new application that's slowly strangling it [0], but for a new application, this seems antithethical to using a framework in the first place. I can't say for sure why you liked Laravel, but I like Laravel/Rails/et.al. because I don't have to make decisions about the parts of the application that aren't unique to what I'm building.
This just allows you to yak shave on a route-by-route basis?
The only place it make sense to me is the validation = at the route level you want to ensure that the given model exists / request attributes defining relationship (pivot), are there. This is how Laravel does this. Having said that this should be responsibity of domain rather than application
Just a quick mention that there is next to no coupling. If you don't use `primate/store`, none of the ORM code gets pulled in. You could be using any other database client.
The same applies to sessions, i18n, or any frontend. They're all either path'd imports or distinct packages.
> But web applications are not just pipelines of isolated tools. They are full of shared assumptions: request shapes, validation boundaries, session handling, rendering, routing, serialization, deployment targets.
Some of those things are specific to web applications. Others are not. It's fine for web-specific logic to be tied to all of the shared assumptions of a web framework, but application logic should not be. As the architecture evolves, the application logic may need to be run in other architectural contexts: as a message consumer, inside an orchestration framework, etc.
That's one of the most painful things about PHP. Entire businesses get built around business logic in PHP backends, and then when you need to execute that logic in a different architectural context, every line of it has to be rewritten, because it's too much work to extricate it from the context of serving web requests.
If you are designing your framework to contain application logic, then it should look ahead to the possibility of that logic being used in a different architectural context. It should facilitate and encourage writing application logic that is agnostic of the web context. Otherwise you're encouraging people to repeat the mistake of PHP all over again.
If you work in a legacy PHP codebase, it's inevitable that you'll see $_GET in the middle of what you thought could be isolated business logic. The coupling that was done in my experience old PHP codebases is awful.
I guess I can't blame PHP because it comes down to the devs to enforce decent boundaries, but I think PHP makes it easier than others to do so.
PHP is so much better now, but if you're writing PHP, there's a very good chance you're not working with that new, clean PHP.
I remember at the beginning Google didn't want to share their SOTA datacenter with public, considering it a market advantage. So instead of raw VMs they decided to promote the "framework" model, where all the seams are polished, under the name of Google App Engine.
I remember we've been going through a security audit, and many of their questions were about ports security and server access -- well, we did not even have SSH access at all, and only 80/443 ports were accessible. It was a breeze.
However, as market has shown, people really do want finer control, SSH root access, and custom ports. Along with many more fine-tuning. For example, GAE autoscaler did not reassign a request that triggered a new instance, waiting for it to start for 20s even though all requests completed within 200ms, so other workers were available, but the request waited for its own instance to wake up.
So I'm skeptical of "seams hidden" approach, as over and over again I needed to tune that one hidden seam.
Coming from Rails, which I’m sure informes part of the philosophy I really like this.
One design value of Rails is “Convention over configuration”, or what I sometimes explain as smart defaults over having to decide everything.
I see this is an area this project can help with; thought through folder and naming conventions; wrestling with issues at the seem between common tools. Making doing things the right way way (like database migrations) becomes the easiest way to do it; most of the time.
A bundle of smart conventions and ways of working that cuts down yak shaving and sometimes solves arguments as the project can be; well we thought on this a lot more than most of you and we’ve gone with this approach to stick these together and if you only half care now you can get this done for free for your apps.
It can be on the client side. Middleware just means something between the operations of the application on a server and operations of the application on a client. Doesn't matter where it sits, it's just the link.
But to the parent comment, yes, I agree, this is a middleware.
My clients and colleagues are bragging about "headless web sites", by which they mean "sites built without WordPress (and kin)", by which they mean "sites built entirely using the English language via AI"
In that sense, the author might be implying that "web framework" may soon be a thing relegated to history
Wait, is that what headless means now in the agency world!? I remember headless meaning the CMS wasn't the software serving the initial request, it just provided an API that some HTML/CSS/JS on S3 or something would consume.
I think the next popular web framework would be something that would be optimized against llm code generation. So that the end result would be secure. correct. scalable(and scaling should be done by an llm).
Great frameworks have great CLI tooling and just work. Be opinionated and consistent. The fact that this supports multiple frontends and multiple runtimes is a hard no for me, already know that it's going to be a massive headache to debug.
I didn't get the same "AI wrote this" that you did, but I get a lot of people saying "AI wrote this" to stuff I definitely wrote by hand, all the way.
Everything gets labeled AI, flagged, and canned.
I'm getting annoyed at HN now and wish I could join an AI-positive / tech-positive version.
There's no objective measurement of “better”, which in itself refutes your argument, but I personally feels AI prose to be very annoying for mostly two reasons:
- it's the same everywhere. People could use AI to write in different styles by prompting and through few-shots learning, but they don't and as a result every AI generated prose looks like something I've already read. Its junk prose the same way way Mac Donalds is junk food.
- if someone doesn't make the effort of writing or even customizing the AI output, then what I'm reading is a low effort post and it's highly unlikely that I'm going to learn anything in the process. As a result as soon as I realize that I'm reading AI slop, I feel the immediate disappointment of having committed some time to reading something that wasn't worth my time.
> Historians will look back at all the silly dead humans in the past that icked and yucked about AI.
Like we look at the silly dead humans in the past who fought back against opium, cigarettes and leaded gasoline?
Maybe for colocating a legacy application with a new application that's slowly strangling it [0], but for a new application, this seems antithethical to using a framework in the first place. I can't say for sure why you liked Laravel, but I like Laravel/Rails/et.al. because I don't have to make decisions about the parts of the application that aren't unique to what I'm building.
This just allows you to yak shave on a route-by-route basis?
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strangler_fig_pattern
Data is always the important part of any real program.
The same applies to sessions, i18n, or any frontend. They're all either path'd imports or distinct packages.
Some of those things are specific to web applications. Others are not. It's fine for web-specific logic to be tied to all of the shared assumptions of a web framework, but application logic should not be. As the architecture evolves, the application logic may need to be run in other architectural contexts: as a message consumer, inside an orchestration framework, etc.
That's one of the most painful things about PHP. Entire businesses get built around business logic in PHP backends, and then when you need to execute that logic in a different architectural context, every line of it has to be rewritten, because it's too much work to extricate it from the context of serving web requests.
If you are designing your framework to contain application logic, then it should look ahead to the possibility of that logic being used in a different architectural context. It should facilitate and encourage writing application logic that is agnostic of the web context. Otherwise you're encouraging people to repeat the mistake of PHP all over again.
I guess I can't blame PHP because it comes down to the devs to enforce decent boundaries, but I think PHP makes it easier than others to do so.
PHP is so much better now, but if you're writing PHP, there's a very good chance you're not working with that new, clean PHP.
I remember we've been going through a security audit, and many of their questions were about ports security and server access -- well, we did not even have SSH access at all, and only 80/443 ports were accessible. It was a breeze.
However, as market has shown, people really do want finer control, SSH root access, and custom ports. Along with many more fine-tuning. For example, GAE autoscaler did not reassign a request that triggered a new instance, waiting for it to start for 20s even though all requests completed within 200ms, so other workers were available, but the request waited for its own instance to wake up.
So I'm skeptical of "seams hidden" approach, as over and over again I needed to tune that one hidden seam.
One design value of Rails is “Convention over configuration”, or what I sometimes explain as smart defaults over having to decide everything.
I see this is an area this project can help with; thought through folder and naming conventions; wrestling with issues at the seem between common tools. Making doing things the right way way (like database migrations) becomes the easiest way to do it; most of the time.
A bundle of smart conventions and ways of working that cuts down yak shaving and sometimes solves arguments as the project can be; well we thought on this a lot more than most of you and we’ve gone with this approach to stick these together and if you only half care now you can get this done for free for your apps.
https://jslightning.com
Sort of a PHP-like, folder based web serving tool that executes Javascript. Very quick and fluid.
But to the parent comment, yes, I agree, this is a middleware.
In that sense, the author might be implying that "web framework" may soon be a thing relegated to history
As astro islands
L(° O °L)