> I just find it hard to believe people are going to bother with Deno any time soon - we’ve gone too far down the NodeJS road.
It depends on migration effort. Take typescript for example, it's very similar with JS that migrate the codebase is not that painful. If the standard library and package manager can prove to highly useful, we'll see two possible scenario that aren't mutually exclusive:
It depends on migration effort. Take typescript for example, it's very similar with JS that migrate the codebase is not that painful. If the standard library and package manager can prove to highly useful, we'll see two possible scenario that aren't mutually exclusive:
1. People migrating to Deno
2. Newer nodejs version follow what Deno has
In the end it's good for us