Time was, there was little enough Javascript about, engines were inefficient enough and processors were single and wimpy enough that most people I know just turned Javascript off, just to make those pages that used it usable.
Now, speed's up and the engines are mostly together, so, now very few people do. Enough sites do what they do through JS that the web without JS would be fundamentally broken.
Now, speed's up and the engines are mostly together, so, now very few people do. Enough sites do what they do through JS that the web without JS would be fundamentally broken.
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