Reminds me of when archive.org "improved" their site with javascript a year or two back and it stopped working entirely if you don't run JS and don't use a modern commercial browser.
They can say whatever they want about how this won't happen but likely it's not up to them (because it's a corporation and because they won't control the decisions of the JS framework they pick). Wikipedia isn't broken. Fixing it is bad.
They can say whatever they want about how this won't happen but likely it's not up to them (because it's a corporation and because they won't control the decisions of the JS framework they pick). Wikipedia isn't broken. Fixing it is bad.