Playing devil’s advocate here… or maybe not… but should we even really care about the .x% of users with JS disabled? Can you even really use the web well without it in 2015?
I think the beauty and usefulness of the isomorphic aspect of React lies not in serving non-JS users but in serving search engine bots. As far I’m concerned, that’s the reason to use it.
Aside from that, why spend so much extra dev time for a marketshare that is virtually non-existent? And if your content is behind a login… than full on JS with no guilt!
Playing devil’s advocate here… or maybe not… but should we even really care about the .x% of users with JS disabled? Can you even really use the web well without it in 2015?
I think the beauty and usefulness of the isomorphic aspect of React lies not in serving non-JS users but in serving search engine bots. As far I’m concerned, that’s the reason to use it.
Aside from that, why spend so much extra dev time for a marketshare that is virtually non-existent? And if your content is behind a login… than full on JS with no guilt!