> 6. But a small yet growing culture of "offliners" becomes
> mainstream. Being offline is the new "Yoga" and allows
> bragging rights.
I also think this. However, where do you brag if you are offline…
> 8. Web development matures and a "standard" stack is accepted,
> all in JS.
I kind of hoping for "going back to basics" in regards to the web. Like content sites rediscover they can work with HTML only and it must not necessarily be rendered with JS.
I agree: For my Web site, I wrote no JS at all. Microsoft's ASP.NET wrote a little for me, but it's optional. My largest page sends for just 400,000 bits. The page is exactly 700 pixels wide and has both horizontal and vertical scroll bars and is usable in a window as narrow as 300 pixels. I intend the page to look good on anything with a Web browser up to date as of, say, 10 years ago.