Summary of Lee Rob & Theo Chat The Future Of Next.js and The Web

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00:00:00 - 01:00:00

Lee Rob discusses the future of Next.js and the web, highlighting the importance of typescript and the new typescript plugin for Next.js. He also discusses the ecosystem, tooling, and examples for Next.js. Finally, he talks about the importance of providing better tooling by default to help developers write better code.

  • 00:00:00 Lee Rob discusses his journey into the Next.js community, and how he became involved by accident. He discusses how he strives to create quality content that is approachable and engaging, and how he expects the trend towards more technical content to continue in 2020.
  • 00:05:00 The video discusses the future of next.js and the web, and discusses Lee Rob's perspective on the importance of individual creativity and talent in the industry. Rob believes that companies should invest in their employees' creativity and talent, rather than micromanaging their content and restricting their freedom to express themselves. He also discusses the importance of individual channels and content creation, and how companies should approach their marketing strategy in order to connect with their audience.
  • 00:10:00 The next 13 release of Next.js is an improvement to the existing toolkit as well as a glimpse into the future of the product. Next.js can be upgraded to 13 and started using some of the new features today.
  • 00:15:00 Lee Rob discusses the future of Next.js and the web, highlighting the importance of typescript and the new typescript plugin for Next.js. He also discusses the ecosystem, tooling, and examples for Next.js. Finally, he talks about the importance of providing better tooling by default to help developers write better code.
  • 00:20:00 Lee Rob and Theo chat about the future of Next.js and the web. They discuss how Next.js works with the app directory and how to handle mutations and forms. They also mention the importance of API routes.
  • 00:25:00 In this video, Lee Rob and Theo talk about the future of Next.js and the web. They discuss how Next.js is evolving and how Astro is helping to simplify the learning process for new web developers. They also discuss how the current mental model for building web applications is changing and how Astro is a great tool for teaching beginners.
  • 00:30:00 Lee Rob and Theo chat about Next.js, the future of the web, and the trade-offs between client-side and server-side development. They discuss the popularity of linear and how it provides a faster experience for users. They also discuss the trade-offs between React and other frameworks, and how user code can often be the source of website speed issues.
  • 00:35:00 Lee Rob discusses the future of Next.js and the web, highlighting how the platform is evolving to be more user-friendly and secure. He also shares an example of how Next.js can be used to connect to a SQL database and make secure queries.
  • 00:40:00 Lee Rob offers a perspective on the future of Next.js and the web, noting that the framework is trying to find a solution that will help everyone "fall into the right you know for lack of a better word pit of success." Rob also discusses some of the challenges that developers face when moving away from using Chrome Dev tools and network tab to debugging their applications. He predicts that the Dev story will change for developers who are used to using their tools, as Next.js will provide better tools to manage caches and understand the state of an application.
  • 00:45:00 In the video, Lee Rob and Theo discuss the future of Next.js and the web. Next by default stores static generated data in persistent storage and allows users to set cache control headers. This helps developers learn about the features of the framework and how to use them efficiently.
  • 00:50:00 Lee Rob and Theo discuss the future of Next.js and the web. They agree that strict defaults are useful and an underutilized tool, and that the iterative nature of development means that nothing is ever set in stone. They also discuss the use of state through query parameters and the trade-off between co-location of components and type safety.
  • 00:55:00 The video discusses Lee Rob's concerns about Next.js' future, and how education materials and the relationship between tech and education materials play a role. Next.js has greatly increased in complexity since it was first released, and Rob believes that developers need to be taught the basics from the beginning in order to fully understand the technology.

01:00:00 - 01:50:00

In the YouTube video, "Lee Rob & Theo Chat The Future Of Next.js and The Web", the two discuss the future of Next.js and the web. Robles notes that the tooling needs to do more to help developers learn Next, and Newburg agrees, saying that the next year of his life is going to be focused on teaching people about Next. They also discuss how community Meta Meta Frameworks can help influence the future of Next.js.

  • 01:00:00 In this video, Lee Robles and Theo Newburg discuss the future of Next.js and the web. Robles notes that the tooling needs to do more to help developers learn Next, and Newburg agrees, saying that the next year of his life is going to be focused on teaching people about Next.
  • 01:05:00 Lee Rob and Theo chat about the future of Next.js and the web, highlighting community efforts to build things around Next.js like T3 apps and Markdoc. They discuss the role of community Meta Meta Frameworks in this trend, and how they can help influence the future of Next.js.
  • 01:10:00 Lee Rob discusses the future of Next.js and the web, noting that the direction shifts in Next could mean that the powerful primitives currently available in Next may be limited. He also has concerns that the Community might not be able to hack, destroy, and innovate with Next's new primitives as easily. He believes that it is important for Next to be flexible, while also providing some degree of security. Rob believes that webpack and Babel transitions are a good example of this dichotomy, with some developers wanting core plugins to be baked into the framework and others wanting the ability to write custom transforms.
  • 01:15:00 The video discusses the future of Next.js and the web, focusing on the potential for react to become a "library" rather than a "primitive" language. The author discusses the benefits of typescript for library creators, and warns that supporting so many different editors and servers makes it hard for them to innovate.
  • 01:20:00 In the YouTube video, Lee Rob and Theo chat the future of Next.js and the web. Rob believes that the role of Next.js in the community will shift more towards API abstraction and innovation happening at the pages API level rather than bundling abstraction. Theo thinks that there will be more people who are interested in hacking and editing and making changes to bundlers, but that the trend over time is moving away from this. They both agree that a supported and done thing for Next.js would be a great future goal.
  • 01:25:00 Theo talks about turbo pack, a new bundler that is incremental and uses Turbo repo, a smart caching system written in Rust and Go. Rob talks about next.js, a JavaScript platform that is fast and modular. They discuss how the future of JavaScript is exciting and promising.
  • 01:30:00 Theo Rob discusses the future of Next.js and the web with Lee Rob. They discuss how Rust and Edge runtimes will play a role in the future, how caching will help improve performance, and how database companies will need to adapt to the changing landscape.
  • 01:35:00 Lee Rob and Theo chat about Edge, its benefits and drawbacks, and how it might be able to help solve some of the performance problems faced by web developers. They also discuss how Edge might be able to help automate some of the decisions web developers have to make when choosing a runtime or framework.
  • 01:40:00 Theo discusses the future of Next.js and the web with Lee Rob, pointing out that there is more than just a "reaction-specific" issue at stake. Lee Rob talks about how Versaille is helping to make building web applications more "agnostic", and how this is benefiting the larger React ecosystem. Santi asks Lee Rob about the pros and cons of data fetching and routing being "agnostic", and Lee Rob offers some insights on the matter.
  • 01:45:00 In this YouTube video, Lee Rob and Theo chat about the future of Next.js and the web. Theo describes how he plans to make his own framework using Next.js, and Rob notes that he's experiencing lag on Theo's end. They discuss Next's stance on single Page Apps and transitional apps, and Rob reminds the audience that they will be hosting a live stream later in the day where they will be discussing Next.js in further detail.
  • 01:50:00 The video's host, Lee Rob, and guest, Theo Chalk, chat about the future of next.js and the web. Rob mentions some cool upcoming features for next.js, and Theo Chalk shares some tips for using fonts in nextgs.

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