But "That silence is the story." is still a pretty telling non-sequitr, and it doesn't seem like the kind that comes from sloppy editing.
The punchy "Thing. Thing. Thing." is used constantly. We see it constantly in this article:
> 852 pages. Win16 API in C.
> Message loops. Window procedures. GDI.
> One OS, one API, one language, one book.
But those are minor sins. But in the end of the article, Snover states that Microsoft pitched C++ in 2012. That's so incorrect! The contents of this blog post are at least partially falsified.
Plus, the thesis statement is nonsense:
> When a platform can’t answer “how should I build a UI?” in under ten seconds, it has failed its developers. Full stop.
"Full stop" is a pretty heavy thing to end a nonsense statement with. How an inanimate software platform can "answer" things is not implicitly obvious, either. Is it a human representative? Are they the docs? Is it through a good UI?
The post is about Petzold's / Reccold's "Programming Windows", but it is apparently 852 pages, so that certainly wasn't answered in under 10 seconds either.
Having said that, this article feels like AI slop to me. Couldn’t get through it.