> Having all those APIs in a sandbox that mostly just work on billion devices is pretty powerful and a potential succesor to HTML would have to beat that, to be adopted.
I think the giant major downside, is that they've written a rootkit that runs on everything, and to try to make up for that they want to make it so only sites they allow can run.
It's not really very powerful at all if nobody can use it, at that point you are better off just not bothering with it at all.
The Internet may remain, but the Web may really be dead.
"It's not really very powerful at all if nobody can use it"
But people do use it, like the both of us right now?
People also use maps, do online banking, play games, start complex interactive learning environments, collaborate in real time on documents etc.
All of that works right now.
> to try to make up for that they want to make it so only sites they allow can run
What do you mean, you can run whatever you want on localhost, and it's quite easy to host whatever you want for whoever you want too. Maybe the biggest modern added barrier to entry is that having TLS is strongly encouraged/even needed for some things, but this is an easily solved problem.
The blog post and several anecdotes in the comments prove otherwise