What doesn't benefit the Web platform is being tossed aside because of superior native development frameworks. That's a far bigger danger than someone forgetting to add a '-moz-' prefixed CSS properly.
A number of people seem to have a somewhat extremely optimistic view that they're going to make Javascript competitive in performance and memory use compared to native on mobile platforms. There's just no evidence that it's going to happen anytime soon. It's just not even close, despite how magical emscripten or Mandreel might seem.
With more and more browsing activity shifting to mobile, and with the majority apps being entertainment/multimedia/games, holding steadfast to the idea that there are not benefits to alternate VMs is more of a dangerous than transient breakage of pages.
Yes, the prefixes are a problem, but the Web needs to evolve fast to keep up. A period of incompatibility and fragmentation can be tolerated. It's happened before, chaos and disequilibrium followed by periods relative calm.
I'm more worried about stagnation, and a future where the web gives way more to the client-server internet days, with everyone running OS specific native apps that read and store data behind walled-garden non-HTTP clouds.
A number of people seem to have a somewhat extremely optimistic view that they're going to make Javascript competitive in performance and memory use compared to native on mobile platforms. There's just no evidence that it's going to happen anytime soon. It's just not even close, despite how magical emscripten or Mandreel might seem.
With more and more browsing activity shifting to mobile, and with the majority apps being entertainment/multimedia/games, holding steadfast to the idea that there are not benefits to alternate VMs is more of a dangerous than transient breakage of pages.
Yes, the prefixes are a problem, but the Web needs to evolve fast to keep up. A period of incompatibility and fragmentation can be tolerated. It's happened before, chaos and disequilibrium followed by periods relative calm.
I'm more worried about stagnation, and a future where the web gives way more to the client-server internet days, with everyone running OS specific native apps that read and store data behind walled-garden non-HTTP clouds.