maccard 7 hours ago

It’s absolutely mind boggling to me that we have gotten to a point that building a web frontend takes longer than compiling the Linux kernel..

  • Hamuko 6 hours ago

    As a non-frontend developer mainly observing and touching something here and there, a lot of the things that frontend developers do seem vastly over-engineered.

    • ramon156 6 hours ago

      I'm not insanely deep into frontend, I mostly just pick up React and call it a day, but it seems like this is also over-engineered?

      I've seen vanilla JS before, and I just know I wouldn't want to do the housekeeping that comes with it. People claim it's less work because it' simpler, but I fully expect myself to rewrite the thing at least twice, only to give up because I have no actual mental model anymore of how it works.

      • selfmodruntime 5 hours ago

        I have never in my career encountered a Vanilla JS project of at least medium size that I would have called simple. They all feature brittle selfmade frameworks whose developers have since left the company years ago.

        • maccard 5 hours ago

          I write C++ and C# all day - I think it’s fair to say the same about a project in any programming language!

    • thibran 6 hours ago

      Isn't the main problem that the building blocks the modern web is based on are not a good fit for what we do with it?

      CSS is a total mess. HTML is a mess. JS is okay, but is not a high quality language.

      We would save so much time and money if we would have a modern base to build on. Sadly this will probably never happen, because company interests will try to corrupt the process and therefore destroy it.

      • selfmodruntime 5 hours ago

        How are CSS and HTML a mess? Combined, they're an incredibly powerful layout engine that works almost the same across all environments and devices while also featuring easy accessibility.

        • rk06 5 hours ago

          the biggest problem with html/css is that they are tightly coupled. you can't meaningfully modify a layout with css alone.

          second biggest problem is "no stricter mode". so even wrong or useless html/css code goes unflagged and is treated as it is normal.

          CSS is way too powerful.

          • rho138 4 hours ago

            > you can’t meaningfully modify a layout with css alone Wut?

        • thibran 4 hours ago

          When taking a bird eyes view on CSS it will be hard to oversee that CSS is a mixture of different concepts that evolved over time with a lot of inconsistentsies. It is possible to make it work, but it's not pretty.

          Same for HTML. If the web would be reimagined today, there is a very low chance that we would create HTML as is.

    • nixpulvis 6 hours ago

      Same reason why 90% of websites have serious UX issues and constant bugs. This and ad frameworks.

    • itopaloglu83 6 hours ago

      It’s mind blowing when you check the generated code, because it goes over 50 elements deep for a simple looking website.

      Makes me think that there’s no way this is computationally efficient either.

      • crooked-v 5 hours ago

        That particular issue is nothing to do with Next or React and everything to do with how HTML/CSS is a really shitty layout engine.

        • maccard 5 hours ago

          Hard disagree. This is JavaScript frameworks building a hierarchy for themselves and ignoring any sort of complexity on the generated DOM. There’s 0 reason for these 8-10 nested divs other than that’s what the framework spits out.

    • maccard 5 hours ago

      This is my understanding too - tools like react are like microservices - they’re a technical solution to an organisational problem. HTML/css/JavaScript is an imperfect abstraction, so we got bootstrap. Then we got client side frameworks which introduced a build step, and then we got asset bundles, optimisers, linters, validators, tree shakers, package managers, validators for your package managers. All of these monkey patched around the actual problem with more abstractions, and the end result is what we have now.

    • pjmlp 4 hours ago

      Like using SPAs for classical Web development, and then they rediscover PHP.

  • selfmodruntime 5 hours ago

    C is infinitely less complex to parse and validate than Typescript. C is compiled in a single pass, the `tsc` type checking algorithm has to check structural typing, conditional types and deep generics while also emulating JS' dynamic behaviour.

    • iptq 5 hours ago

      I don't think any C compiler has been single pass for the last 20 years. Typescript's analyses are also not that complicated, it's just that the typescript type checker is written in js. Iirc the actual ts -> js part is pretty fast with some of the more recent compilers.

    • maccard 5 hours ago

      I disagree - this is an excuse. Even the post we’re commenting in now shows that it’s a series of poor abstractions and bad tooling that takes way too long to do the basics, combined with a language and ecosystem that encourages this behaviour . They saw a 5x speed up by changing tools while still using a JavaScript framework so it’s clearly possible for it to not be complete nonsense.

miyuru 5 hours ago

I just tried their domains page it took 10.8MB of data and took 2s for the DOM to be ready.

page actually took 17s to fully render with multiple shift changes.

all to render a domain search bar similar to google home page.

https://railway.com/domains

l5870uoo9y 5 hours ago

I migrated the landing pages for my app[1] from Nextjs to Astrojs mainly because I was paying Vercel $20 per month for serving static pages(it’s 4 times more than I pay Railway for the Postgres database for the actual app and also 4 times more than I pay Cloudflare for hosting all my apps). I used AI for migrating and it took a few days only as the existing repo was used as “instructions” and it included some upgrades and improvements here and there.

[1]: https://www.sqlai.ai/

tgdn 6 hours ago

We went through a very similar migration. Had a Next.js landing page and a separate TanStack Router SPA - consolidated both into a single Vite + TanStack Start app. Same experience with build times and the architecture mismatch: our app is heavily client-side with real-time state, and fighting Next.js's server-first assumptions wasn't worth it. TanStack Router's type-safe routing and file-based route generation have been great.

  • SilverSlash 5 hours ago

    I hadn't heard of TanStack but a quick look at their website doesn't inspire confidence tbh. I mean, just take "TanStack Pacer".

    It provides such things as:

    ```

    import { Debouncer } from '@tanstack/pacer' // class

    const debouncer = new Debouncer(fn, options)

    debouncer.maybeExecute(args) // execute the debounced function

    debouncer.cancel() // cancel the debounced function

    debouncer.flush() // flush the debounced function

    ```

    Why? Just why do you need to install some "framwork" for implement debouncing? Isn't this sort of absurdism the reason why the node ecosystem is so insecure and vulnerable in the first place? Just write a simple debouncer using vanilla js...

UserMark 6 hours ago

I have a Nextjs heavy app which takes around 7 minutes currently. But I've been thinking of moving away from next for a long time now. TanStack seems to be a good fit. This gives me a bit more confidence in just doing it.

  • Kelteseth 6 hours ago

    As a cpp developer I had to chuckle there. And I thought our compile times were bad.

  • abustamam 6 hours ago

    I've been pretty happy with TanStack start for a medium-sized project. I would not know how its build time would compare to Next, but our similarly sized Remix (sorry, React router v7) app takes longer to build.

    TanStack just has a nicer mental model overall and works great with TanStack query for cache I validation and stuff like that.

    Remix was promising but there was so much ceremony in registering API routes and stuff. Tanstack just lets you define server functions arbitrarily with no ceremony.

    Might be worth a spike and some tokens to ask Claude Code to migrate and test the build time and ergonomics.

    • UserMark 3 hours ago

      I've been on the remix on a previous project, I have to say that Remix was even worse. But that's probably of the setup with vite etc not being correctly done.

  • cryptonym 6 hours ago

    Is server-rendered HTML that bad for 2026 web or is everyone building complex apps?

    Many of my customers insists on using Next.js or similar but when I browse their website I don't get the point. They are downloading and executing megabytes of JS while in-page interactions tends to be limited to few basic stuff. Never seen one of their project requiring offline mode. Maybe that's being able to easily replace a [FRAMEWORK] dev with another.

  • wilson090 6 hours ago

    Are you on turbopack? It's available on Next 16 and just took our build times down from 6 minutes to 2 minutes

    • cbovis 5 hours ago

      Yep this is what's often misunderstood.

      We also recently cut our build times in half moving from Webpack to Turbopack on production builds after jumping to NextJS 16. We'd already been using Turbopack in development for a while which yielded massive DX improvements related to performance. Production build times will drop further once Turbopack production build caching is stable.

      Webpack -> Turbopack is the smart initial migration. I'd bet Railway went straight from Webpack -> Vite not realising that their real gains sat with the build tooling, not NextJS vs Tanstack.

    • UserMark 3 hours ago

      Yes I'm on turbopack and running the latest version of Nextjs.

  • nomel 6 hours ago

    I made two serious attempts to get into front end web development, around 5 years apart. Both times I started with the most popular framework. Both times the most popular framework was something different before I even finished the project.

    Looks like maybe things haven't changed much?

SilverSlash 6 hours ago

A lot of the LLMs are very familiar with next.js and vercel is also aggressively building an ecosystem around their tooling for LLMs. So I wonder if this problem will only be exacerbated when everyone using LLMs is strongly nudged (forced) to use next?

  • ai_slop_hater 5 hours ago

    When you create a Next.js project from Vercel's template, you get an AGENTS.md that literally says "THIS IS NOT THE NEXT.JS YOU KNOW"

    • mcintyre1994 5 hours ago

      Is that because LLMs default to the older pages router? Or are they actually providing a different version of the library optimised in some way for agents?

      • ai_slop_hater 5 hours ago

        I think they just want LLMs to read the docs they began shipping[0] along with the library instead of using their own knowledge. For example, when I used Next.js a few months ago, models kept using cookies() and headers() without await, because that's how older Next.js versions worked, but modern Next.js requires await. I imagine there are more cases like this.

        [0]: https://nextjs.org/docs/app/guides/ai-agents#how-it-works

        • HKayn 3 hours ago

          One rather prominent case would be Tailwind. v4 made breaking changes in the way Tailwind is set up, requiring different packages and syntax. However, if you ask an LLM how to set up Tailwind on your Vite & React app, it will confidently list the setup steps for Tailwind v3, which no longer work.

          At times I would see people daily asking for help with their broken Tailwind setups, and almost always it was them trying to use Tailwind v4 the v3 way because some AI told them so.

  • GrayShade 5 hours ago

    We've had shitty bloated websites before LLMs were a thing.

Hendrikto 6 hours ago

Two minutes is still way too long. What are we doing? This is ridiculous.

  • selfmodruntime 5 hours ago

    We're doing structural type checking for a language that wasn't developed with that in mind.

jspaetzel 6 hours ago

Incredible that the builds were ever 10min. How far things have regressed.

oefrha 5 hours ago

Time to move your blog off Next too? It’s slow as molasses for me, loads a billion JS chunks and JSON fragments, when it can be a static site.

lukasholzer 3 hours ago

This is the kind of post I wish more teams would write. The "we picked the popular thing and it got slow" story is so common. But most teams just live with it. They don't want to touch it. 10 minutes to 2 minutes is huge for dev speed!

I'm a huge fan of tanstack start especially the ability to just static prerender some paths (a feature I'm missing a ton with astro) For me tanstack start is the new dominator on the stack!

sanghyunp 5 hours ago

The two-PR strategy is smart — decouple from the framework first, then swap it. That's the kind of migration discipline most teams skip, and it's why they end up running two systems in parallel for months.

I run a Next.js App Router site in production (marketing + blog). Build times aren't painful yet, but I've noticed the same pattern: most of the build time is Next.js doing things I didn't ask for. For a mostly-static marketing site it's tolerable, but I can see how it becomes a dealbreaker for a rich client-side app like Railway's dashboard.

Curious — after the migration, did you see any measurable difference in runtime performance (TTFB, hydration) or was the win purely on the build/DX side?

wouldbecouldbe 6 hours ago

The irony is deploying NextJS on the railway platform is super slow since they use containers, on Vercel 2 min is like 12 min on railway, deployments on a vps are only like 20 seconds.

*I know this is just build time, so this is different then their deployement time

  • huksley 6 hours ago

    Not containers to blame but overprovisioning and how much resources dedicated to building. I am not sure how Vercel gets things build in literal seconds, but, hey, they are the creators of NextJS.

    At DollarDeploy we building it also in containers but every build get 4GB/2CPU so it is quite fast but not as fast as Vercel.

eino 5 hours ago

We made a similar move from Next.js to Vite (with Tanstack router): CI build dropped from 12 min to barely 2 min. We won't look back.

samwreww 6 hours ago

They don't even mention the Next.js version used - where they using Turbopack or not?

  • wilson090 6 hours ago

    excellent question - recently switched from turbopack after getting annoyed by build times. we saw them go from 6 mins to 2 mins

pjmlp 4 hours ago

Zero references to Turbopack, maybe start there?

mlnj 6 hours ago

This is one of the most frustrating thing about working with NextJS. There seems to be no way to improve the speed of building the app.

  • abustamam 6 hours ago

    I've used the other major meta frameworks (remix and tanstack). I don't think there is a way to improve the speed of building the app in those ecosystems. Happy to be proven wrong.

huksley 6 hours ago

Anyone tried to use vinext from Cloudflare in production? Might be faster.

But seriously, not sure why NextJS builds take so much, we are using stable and functional pages router in DollarDeploy and it is still takes too much time to build.

mememememememo 6 hours ago

Wait till you use HTMX!

  • SilverSlash 6 hours ago

    As in, htmx is better? I haven't used it but last I looked into it I was extremely confused as to whether it was a meme, an actual framework, or both.

    • mememememememo 5 hours ago

      None of the above. It is a utility (I guess framework maybe) for a feature that was cool in ASP.NET back in 2005. But that is it's charm. It is just JS swapping out the dom for you.

mellosouls 7 hours ago

Reminder, as its not mentioned:

Next.js is produced by Vercel, a competitor to Railway.

  • debarshri 6 hours ago

    Moving to vite + tanstack builds faster is also a fact.

    • pjmlp 4 hours ago

      Only if they weren't using Turbopack.

  • abustamam 6 hours ago

    It's not mentioned because it's not relevant.

    • mellosouls 6 hours ago

      Of course it should be mentioned, it's a basic disclaimer.

    • norman784 5 hours ago

      I don't know the situation now, but a while ago there were a lot of pushback using Next.js because it was not easy to use all features if not hosted on Vercel.

      • abustamam 1 hour ago

        We used NextJS on a project hosted on AWS a while ago. We learned quickly it wasn't the best tool for what we wanted to do which is why we stopped using it. But it's an open source project whose purpose is to drive devs to Vercel. It doesn't surprise me that there are some features that work best with Vercel (but it does surprise me that only recently other providers started to need adapters).

        Anyway, my point is that no one is forced to use NextJS and if they like NextJS but not Vercel they can always fork it or, apparently write an adapter.

  • cryptonym 5 hours ago

    True. That framework is owned by a cloud company and the way they host Next.js apps in a secure and scalable way remains secret sauce.

    Now it doesn't really impact build time and Railway offers Next.js hosting.

fnoef 6 hours ago

:suprised_pikachu_face:

Is the quality of software engineers really dropped that low that people get excited when they move off from "heavy bloated" frameworks to lighter alternatives? Or is this just SEO farming garbage to position the company higher in search results?

  • yla92 4 hours ago

    Both can be true at the same time!