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.obsidian/appearance.json

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{
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"baseFontSize": 16,
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"cssTheme": "80s Neon"
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# My Favorite New Podcasts in 2021
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You probably already know what the top podcasts are in each domain, so my hope is to give some spotlight to the up-and-comers. (These podcasts may not have started in 2021, but they are new to me this year).
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Without further ado:
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## Best New Tech Podcasts in 2021
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- **[Corecursive](https://corecursive.com/) - Adam Gordon Bell**: really fascinating interviews with tech OG's. Many stories that have never been told. Regularly tops Hacker News. I still have the [Apple 2001](https://corecursive.com/063-apple-2001/) episode saved.
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- **[Sourcegraph](https://about.sourcegraph.com/podcast/) - Beyang Liu**: In depth founder/engineer interviews from the CTO of Sourcegraph, exploring his own personal curiosity. Personal pick: [David Cramer of Sentry](https://about.sourcegraph.com/podcast/david-cramer/).
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- **[Stevey's Tech Talk](https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLZfuUWMTtMcC1DZF6HxJhqsGrBXu8Jzi7) - Steve Yegge**: Truth bombs from our industry's best truthteller. Personal pick: [Why CEOs crash and burn](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jUtUAc_ew9Y&list=PLZfuUWMTtMcC1DZF6HxJhqsGrBXu8Jzi7&index=14&t=62s).
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- **[Podrocket](https://podrocket.logrocket.com/) - LogRocket's Brian, Ben, and Kate**: Interviews of the frontend ecosystem, including [yours truly](https://podrocket.logrocket.com/swyx) and [yours truly](https://podrocket.logrocket.com/svelte)! Personal pick: [Kiwicopple of Supabase](https://podrocket.logrocket.com/9)
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- **[Devtools.fm](https://devtools.fm/) - Justin Bennett and Andrew Lisowski**: Interviews of the frontend ecosystem, including [yours truly](https://devtools.fm/episode/13)! Personal pick: [Jason Laster of Replay.io](https://devtools.fm/episode/9)
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## Best New Business/Crypto Podcasts in 2021
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- **[Business Breakdowns](https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/business-breakdowns-colossus-MXUSbYila-6/) by Jesse Pujji**: Deeply researched breakdowns of big businesses. Personal pick: [Moderna with Jason Kelly](https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/business-breakdowns/moderna-the-software-of-life-V6FBhzbfMU3/).
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- **[The Breakdown](https://www.coindesk.com/podcasts/the-breakdown-with-nlw/) with NLW**: daily news updates on Crypto.
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- **[Not Boring](https://www.notboring.co/) by Packy McCormick**: Technically a newsletter, but still counts because he reads every essay on audio. Personal Pick: [Ramp's Double Unicorn Rounds](https://twitter.com/swyx/status/1431486611296964611). [His personal journey](https://twitter.com/packyM/status/1379055262913466373) is also inspiring.
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- **[Bankless](http://podcast.banklesshq.com/) podcast**: entertaining updates on crypto, ETH biased but not maximalist.
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## Best New Creator/General Podcasts in 2021
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- **[Creator Lab](https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3lSc9lP47q-_Wyp3LCWbYw) - Bilal Zaidi**: Generic Interview Successful People podcast, but well executed. Personal Pick: [Polina Marinova](https://twitter.com/swyx/status/1351472680415883268) and [Tim Urban](https://twitter.com/swyx/status/1350824207051997192) and [Rahul Vohra](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t0HJTD_eyR8&t=47s).
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- **[Masters of Community](https://pod.cmxhub.com/episodes/) - David Spinks**: Truly one of the top 3 best resources on learning to build/manage community on the planet. Personal picks: [Jon Levy](https://twitter.com/swyx/status/1389389360433307650) and [Matthew Kobach](https://pod.cmxhub.com/episodes/matthew-kobach-greatest-hits)
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- **[Talking Too Loud](https://wistia.com/series/talking-too-loud) - Chris Savage**: Great rapport and banter with Sylvie. Personal Pick: [Jay Acunzo's picks of them](https://jayacunzo.com/3-clips?wchannelid=mkkamqxlvs&wmediaid=im2xaeptts).
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- **[Brains](https://www.brainspodcast.com/) - Courtland Allen and Julian Shapiro**: Still new, but great discussions from two of the most thoughtful creators out there, in an interesting 4-player format. Personal pick: [Sam Parr and Aella](https://swyx.transistor.fm/episodes/writing-to-engage-and-writing-for-action-julian-shapiro-aella-sam-parr)
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- **[Not Overthinking](https://notoverthinking.com/) - Abdaal Brothers**: Ali Abdaal getting the piss taken out of him by his surprisingly attractive older brother is just amazing.
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## Context
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In 2019 I published [the list of podcasts I listen to](https://www.swyx.io/fave-podcasts/), and [last year](https://www.swyx.io/fave-podcasts-2020/) I updated it with newer podcasts, so I'm continuing that tradition this year!
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The big difference is that [I now run a daily mixtape](https://www.swyx.io/personal-podcasting) which clips from all the podcasts I listen to, so you get a live "best of" feed from me if you [subscribe](https://swyx.transistor.fm/). I also run my own [infrequent YouTube podcast](https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLH8IAbt5kqZOlrX34L93lFzOZ1k-ry_Ll) and am a panelist on [Svelte Radio](https://www.svelteradio.com/episodes).
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## Good But Dead
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I had these podcasts lined up for my end of year lists, but they also died this year so I can't continue to recommend them. However, they have some backlogs worth digging through:
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- [3 Clips when it was under Jay Acunzo](https://3clipspodcast.com/) - really good, inspiration for my own mixtape of podcasts
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- [Josh Constine's Press Club](https://constine.substack.com/) - had some good early essays on creator economy
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- [Under the Hood](https://underthehoodpod.robinhood.com/) - Robinhood's CEO Vlad Tenev trying to be a podcaster was both awkward and interesting.
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- [Spotify: A Product Story](https://open.spotify.com/show/3L9tzrt0CthF6hNkxYIeSB) - Spotify's CRDO telling Spotify's own hagiography was still well told. [First episode on Metallica and Sean Parker is great](https://twitter.com/swyx/status/1373816614999658499).
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## Still Good
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I love good picks that last! Here are some special highlights and shoutouts from [my 2020 picks](https://www.swyx.io/fave-podcasts-2020/):
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- **[Clublife](https://soundcloud.com/clublifebytiesto)**: Tiesto is still banging out the hits for free, amazing
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- **[Conan](https://www.earwolf.com/show/conan-obrien/)**: Conan, Sona and gang are still hilarious and great company. [Their recent live show was INCREDIBLE](https://www.earwolf.com/episode/live-with-will-arnett-at-the-wiltern-theatre/).
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- **[Software Social](https://softwaresocial.dev/)**: Michele has now pulled off a book launch ([I liked it](https://twitter.com/mjwhansen/status/1437414398184808451)) and Colleen now has a job! It has been fun to follow along.
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- **[Writing Excuses](https://writingexcuses.com/)**: Brandon Sanderson hasn't swung by in forever, but the tips have continued flowing! I liked the episode on [Audiobooks](https://writingexcuses.com/2020/10/25/15-43-audiobook-narration-with-bruce-d-richardson/) and they had some good stuff on MICE and Game/Worldbuilding.
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# Moving to Obsidian as a Public Second Brain
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I've gone through many versions of notetaking systems in the past decade, from literal "in memory" storage, to [writing cheatsheets](https://github.com/typescript-cheatsheets/react-typescript-cheatsheet), to blogging everything publicly, to storing private notes in OneNote, then SimpleNote, then Notion. For focused topics, I have a long history of making [markdown repos on GitHub accumulating thousands of stars](https://publish.obsidian.md/swyx/README#Rollup+of+my+Lists). I've also considered [Evernote](https://evernote.com/), [Joplin](https://joplinapp.org/) and [Roam](https://roamresearch.com/) and its less culty competitors [Foam](https://foambubble.github.io/foam/) and [Athens](https://www.athensresearch.org/).
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[Two months ago](https://twitter.com/swyxio/status/1465976030477230080) I moved my notes to [Obsidian](https://obsidian.md/), and I've been fairly happy with the result. Time for a good ole experience report!
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> You can check out the repo, [sw-yx/brain](https://github.com/sw-yx/brain) or the published Obsidian site [https://publish.obsidian.md/swyx/](https://publish.obsidian.md/swyx/)
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## Why a -Public- Second Brain?
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I'll assume you already know [the benefits of Building a Second Brain](https://www.swyx.io/tiago-forte-second-brain) - I was a [mentor for the course](https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/the-swyx-mixtape/second-brain-1-the-capture-UQ7nt-6fr5c/) if you need a quick intro. Here my focus is on convincing you why your S.B. should be *public*:
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- [Learning in Public](https://www.swyx.io/learn-in-public/) increases your [Luck Surface Area](https://www.swyx.io/create-luck/#luck-surface-area)
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- Creating reusable/referenceable [Open Source Knowledge](https://youtu.be/XoATf7xGoUY) helps you compound knowledge work + [save keystrokes](https://www.hanselman.com/blog/do-they-deserve-the-gift-of-your-keystrokes) when helping people
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- Having a [Digital Garden](https://www.swyx.io/digital-garden-tos) to grow drafts in public with lower expectations than blog/social media is inspiring to others - aka [Working with the Garage Door Up](https://notes.andymatuschak.org/Work_with_the_garage_door_up)
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- One "monorepo" for all your notes frees you/your readers from having to remember where you put your notes + makes related notes more discoverable
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- aka [Personal Content Warehouse](https://twitter.com/swyx/status/1337519894644940802)?
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## My Criteria for Second Brain Tooling
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As I reached the limits of SimpleNote/Notion/GitHub, I thought about these factors for my next notetaking tool:
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- **Markdown based**: Friction slows down your speed of thought. Unacceptable.
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- **If your editor gets in the way then you are paying cognitive overhead.** Notion's blocks are great until you try to select text or move around blocks and it doesn't do what you want.
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- **If your editor uses proprietary data formats it will be hard to migrate/render**. If you do this right your notes should outlive Notion. And if you wish to render notes publicly from Notion, keep in mind [even expert programmers face a lot of hurdles](https://twitter.com/adamwathan/status/1483523307651670020) because Notion is not an API first company (dev experience will always be a second class citizen). Markdown is Lindy.
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- (Nice to have) WYSIWYG Markdown writing experience like [Typora](https://typora.io/).
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- **Git**: I'm inherently interested in explorable histories of ideas (for [history surfing](https://github.com/pomber/git-history)/idea archaeology), and Git is the only version control system worth considering these days.
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- **Mobile app**: Again, a friction point - I have ideas in the shower, on a walk, or otherwise away from the computer, so I need a mobile app. To some extent, if I use Markdown, then that can be a [Narrow Waist](https://www.swyx.io/narrow-waists) interface where I can use apps that speak Markdown and Git, like [GitJournal](https://blog.dendron.so/notes/fDCVPEo3guCFWPdxokXHU/#gitjournal).
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- **Bidirectional Linking**: truly the feature popularized by Roam - I think networked thought is [ideal](https://twitter.com/swyx/status/1337519894644940802) and [some of the ways that people use it](https://www.nateliason.com/blog/roam) are truly mindblowing (I'm not personally there yet)
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- (Nice to have) Graph visualization of links, although I have my doubts about how useful this is in practice
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- **Publish with Search**: If you are Git and Markdown based, then GitHub does view and search fine, but the navigation, display and search experience could probably be improved with custom CSS, link previews, backlink lists, Table of Contents tracking, and so on.
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- **(Nice to have) Image and File storage**: Being able to store arbitrary images and files freely without friction/consideration of cost would be nice, but in practice i'm so word- and resource-heavy that this has not actually come up as a pain point in the last 2 months
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Notably lacking among these desirables is the idea that the notetaking service should be free. As a serious knowledge worker intent on making this work for the next 40-60 years of my life, I'm quite happy paying $5-20 a month for something that is going to last that I don't have to maintain myself.
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These factors are why I chose [Obsidian](https://obsidian.md/), with [Obsidian Publish](https://obsidian.md/publish) (which is still relatively new and leaves some things to be desired).
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I admit I was also influenced by Ezell and others in the [Coding Career Community](https://ezell.dev/brain/Ideas/How+to+Create+Value) who have been talking about Obsidian for over a year.
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## Obsidian Tips
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- **Use the [PARA system](https://fortelabs.co/blog/para/)**
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- It has the right level of simplicity and effectiveness out of any system I've tried, which has always spiraled out of control.
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- I'm very much not perfect at this (but nobody is). I'm much better at keeping A's and R's than P's, which I still tend to manage in my head.
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- **Sync through iCloud and GitHub**
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- Obsidian has a great ecosystem of core and community plugins. Honestly the main one I get the most use out of is Obsidian Git, which I have set up to sync every 20 minutes.
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- For the mobile app, you have to use iCloud, which I finally bit the bullet and started paying for after ~10 years of ignoring the stupid iCloud nag.
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- **Obsidian Publish**
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- You can customize the landing page, which I think is important for reader experience.
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- The search isn't fulltext search, so it leaves a lot to be desired.
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- You still have to manually publish changes, which feels weird.
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- You can also customize the CSS and JS, which I haven't yet but feels like an opportunity.
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Overall, I'm the happiest I've ever been with my public notes so far and feel I've been both unblocked and more productive with Obsidian. Not all my notes are public, of course, so I still keep some stuff in Notion.
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**JavaScript is in a tremendously better state today compared to the first survey in 2016.** Back then, only [21% of you used TypeScript](https://2020.stateofjs.com/en-US/technologies/javascript-flavors/javascript_flavors_experience_ranking), compared to a [nice 69%](https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/other-tools/javascript_flavors) today. Where in 2016 we used to joke about a new frontend framework releasing every day, React has now held the top spot [for 6 years running](https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/libraries/front-end-frameworks/front_end_frameworks_experience_ranking). The percentage of people reporting that "JS is moving too fast" is down from [59% then to 38% today](https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/opinions/js_ecosystem_changing_to_fast).
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This is not to say that JS has stood still. Due kudos must be given to the champions of [the Optional Chaining and Nullish Coalescing APIs](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-optional-chaining), which have rocketed up to be **by far the most used new JS APIs** in our survey, despite only being 2 years old. The [6.2% and 13.8%](https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/features/language/#nullish_coalescing) of you who have never heard of them should probably give them a try! More good things are on the way from TC39: you reported that date management is a [top missing feature](https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/opinions/currently_missing_from_js_wins) and the Temporal API recently reached [Stage 3](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-temporal).
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Over in user-land, **Solid made a great debut** tying with Svelte in first place for the coveted [top spot in frontend satisfaction](https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/libraries/front-end-frameworks). Vue.js is on track to overtake Angular in usage sometime in 2022-23. [Backend/Fullstack frameworks](https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/libraries/back-end-frameworks) have seen much more innovation, with SvelteKit, Astro, and Remix all debuting with very high satisfaction. However, serious usage lags greatly behind, with Express still the undisputed king and Next.js the distant but fastest growing second place. The difference in pace between front and back can be explained by developer happiness: [66% of you are happy](https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/libraries/front-end-frameworks/front_end_frameworks_happiness) with frontend frameworks, but only [50% are happy](https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/libraries/back-end-frameworks/back_end_frameworks_happiness) with backend ones.
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In terms of build tools, **2021 has been the year of Vite**. Vite not only debuted at 98% satisfaction, [the highest scoring library across all of JavaScript](https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/libraries/tier_list), but usage is already at 30% in its first year on our survey, eclipsing `esbuild`. Vite isn't alone in trying to improve the state of JavaScript Build Tools - 8 of the 12 tools we track today are less than 2 years old! Also notable: for the first time, new entrants like Deno, Rome, swc, and Snowpack are now supported by venture-backed companies, perhaps charting a viable alternative to the fragile open source funding environment.
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As the [Third Age of JavaScript](https://www.swyx.io/js-third-age/) enters its third year, the opportunities for aspiring open sourcerors and entrepreneurs continue to unfold:
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- In our first year of tracking [**monorepo tooling**](https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/libraries/monorepo-tools), pnpm, Turborepo, and Nx took the top spots, but only 25% report being happy with the state of monorepo tooling.
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- Looking at [**runtimes**](https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/other-tools/runtimes), Deno is stable at 5.6% usage but faces fierce competition from the various Serverless and Workers platforms.
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- **Teaching** online continues to be a source of incredible opportunity, as most of you report self directed learning, free courses, and paid screencasts and books to be [your top choices in learning](https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/resources/first_steps).
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Lastly, it's worth mentioning our top write-ins, as it can help correct unintentional biases. This year's top write-ins are [Elm](https://elm-lang.org/), [Stencil](https://stenciljs.com/), and [Platzi](https://platzi.com/). If your favorite library or resource didn't do well this year, keep spreading the word!
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After all, last year's [3rd place write in](https://2020.stateofjs.com/en-US/awards/#tool_interest_award) was... **Vite**.
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## notes
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- frontend frameworks
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- growing interest and usage: svelte
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- solidjs tie with svelte top spot
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- falling: gulp, ember, jasmine, gatsby
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- every framework makes someone happy https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/libraries/front-end-frameworks/front_end_frameworks_section_streams
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- backend frameworks
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- sveltekit, astro, and remix all debuting very highly
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- adoption goes much slower - express is sitll overwhelming standard, with nextjs a distant but quickly growing second
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- its happiness - 66% report happy with frontend, but only 50% report being happy with backend
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- build tools
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- Vite debut at 98% satisfaction, with
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- 8 of the 12 tools are less than 2 years old, third age of javascript
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- esbuild and tsc
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- vite, testing library, cypress
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opportunities?
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- 30% happy with mobile and desktop
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%%- static typing, stdlib, better date management%%
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- monorepo tooling
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- managing dependencies and code architecture
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- pnpm, turborepo, and nx 25%
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- teach - blog, free course, books
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- write ins
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- elm, stencil, platzi
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- last year's 3rd place write in was vite, this year is the highest satisfaction library
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A - DX Circle/API Design notes.md

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- https://twitter.com/sebasbensu/status/1490452318818426880
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- People don't want to learn your API, so think of it as a ladder:
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- 1. Maximize the problems experts can solve.
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- 2. Minimize how much a novice needs to learn when they take their first step.
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- 3. Make a smooth ladder between their first and last step.

A - DX Circle/Archive.zip

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