671 points by coloneltcb 1 day ago | 301 comments | View on ycombinator
valgaze 1 day ago |
yuppiepuppie 1 day ago |
I wonder how the initial investors feel about the aqui-hire path... Must be a pretty nice sum for them to agree to it, or they saw that the path to any revenue was near impossible/non-existant
olingern 1 day ago |
As an aside, I have to use Cloudlare at work and it’s a pretty awful experience for the medium sized org I’m at. “Hostile UX” is a common complaint. Maybe they should invest money in competing with Vercel on UX/DX instead of acquiring open source projects.
demetris 1 day ago |
This news does not make me happy.
Same with the news about Astro earlier this year.
I know it must be good for the people how have made the projects (why else would they chose to do it?) but there is something in those acquisitions that makes me uneasy.
hntiz 1 day ago |
bluelightning2k 1 day ago |
The agents already reach for Vite. When they reach for Vite it's very logical they will default to CloudFlare after. (Much like they will guide users to setup Vercel for NextJS).
This could be a $20m acquisition which will generate $billions from the increase in the agent equivalent of SEO.
swe_dima 1 day ago |
It's one of those things that always stopped me from building cool tools - you have to make a living somehow.
So I am happy for the team of builders that they were able to receive the deserved payout and sustainability.
true_religion 1 day ago |
NPM -> Microsoft
Vite -> Cloudflare
Bun -> Anthropic
Turbopack -> Vercel
Remix -> Shopify (I barely remember this one)
Biome (formerly Rome) -> Indie but largely supported by Depot
SWC -> Indie
esBuild -> Indie
I use RsBuild/RsPack which is ByteDance supported.
freedomben 1 day ago |
Appreciate them putting that so clearly. I am highly skeptical of acquisitions now because we've been burned so many times in the past. Time will tell if this stays true, but at least it's clearly on the record. Would love to know if this is in contract/writing somewhere as part of the acquisition.
jazzypants 1 day ago |
The monetization story never really made sense to me. It seems really hard to carve out a space in the managed hosting world. Are the Vercel and Laravel teams the only ones to make Private Equity work?
karpetrosyan 1 day ago |
jesse_dot_id 1 day ago |
Ajunne 1 day ago |
"VoidZero is joining Cloudflare"
As if they chose to do that. Yes, they agreed to it, but in the end it was just a huge financial transaction.
But i guess "Cloudflare buys VoidZero" just sounds less friendly. Even though that is exactly what happened.
holistio 1 day ago |
pier25 1 day ago |
intellix 1 day ago |
TIPSIO 1 day ago |
- In the earliest days (literally go read their blog posts and GitHub repos), they only ever really did dinky little demo's.
- After and for the longest time, they tried to claim they went "Full Stack" with SSR-able abilities, but they were so terrible back then and not even well integrated into their Worker platform tools.
- This was oddly gray mixed (sometimes?) with Pages messaging which definitely was not full-stack in the sense developers wanted.
- Then getting any of this to work in a dev environment was super difficult as "wrangler dev" was very limited (wrangler is so good now FYI).
- Vercel just kind of ate Cloudflare's lunch here. No shame in it. They just couldn't get it right for developers period.
- Then very quietly "Adapters" came around and basically changed the game. Your code base finally felt portable to Workers with essentially full CF platform support.
- Now we live in AI-age and they bought Astro (?), tried to launch WP clone (?), and vibe-coded Next (?)
Big and long time coming for all of this. It is a super breath of fresh air to see even more improvements will likely come to Workers. Icing on cake is Evan is a legend who has a proven track record of delivering tools people love.
joeyhage 1 day ago |
AndreiCalazans 1 day ago |
ta-run 1 day ago |
maherbeg 1 day ago |
I do believe though that these tools (formatting, linting etc.) should be built into the language like Go, and I really hope the Node team can just absorb the best ideas and make solid primitives that can be built on top of as the ecosystem evolves (think golang's http interfaces, or test interfaces)
Brosper 1 day ago |
postalcoder 1 day ago |
I don’t get the complaining about OS developers behind these incredible pieces of software like uv, bun, etc is a bad thing. If anything, it’ll continue to incentivize great developers to fill in the blanks and continue to push things forward. It’s a win for everyone.
egorfine 1 day ago |
I'm sad to see these tools go. Vite was a godsend after a zoo of webpack/grunt/etc.
But what will happen is that new sane tool will come up once vite dissolves and that's the never ending cycle.
tracerbulletx 1 day ago |
meszmate 1 day ago |
rumblefrog 1 day ago |
tuananh 1 day ago |
bluelightning2k 1 day ago |
The article didn't mention what happens to paying Vite+ users. Is that because there basically aren't any?
outlore 1 day ago |
nja 1 day ago |
(Fwiw SDM ended up being a better alternative anyways... not looking forward to their eventual acquisition and shutdown :/ )
kylecordes 1 day ago |
todotask2 1 day ago |
It also came at a time when expectations for the project were starting to increase.
embedding-shape 1 day ago |
Already at this point, I start thinking that they're turning Vite into a foundation, or donating it to the Linux Foundation, or something like that. "foundation" is mentioned 10 times in total in various ways, but then some actual foundation creation/handover never came up. Even when they themselves state how important it is developers have choice and everything shouldn't centralized around a single vendor. Deeply ironic.
phplovesong 1 day ago |
Thank god i did not use vite for anything serious.
Esbuild is still my goto even after many years.
chrisweekly 1 day ago |
ruguo 1 day ago |
Sammi 1 day ago |
aatd86 1 day ago |
j_w 1 day ago |
Not for the aquire-ee(?), I'm not going to be a hypocrite and claim I wouldn't take the payout if I were in that position. But that companies can build massive moats by just buying up as many other companies as possible.
I don't even feel like I can make a "good" argument for it either. Massive companies becoming more massive through acquisitions just feels wrong, like the end game won't work out well for the commons.
I assume the point here is that now Cloudflare can try and push more Vite users into their ecosystem? Nudge the development to integrate better with their products? They say they are moving towards Vite, not Vite moving towards Cloudflare, but ultimately <tool> moves in the direction <owner> decides - even if it's "developed openly."
dzonga 1 day ago |
opem 1 day ago |
mellosouls 1 day ago |
I appreciate Cloudflare's loud positive proclamation here wrt the OS future; I know scepticism is warranted with some takeovers but although there might be a trend towards Cloudflare fit over the long term that's very different from closing down or abandonment so this generally seems positive to me - best wishes to all parties.
timdavid2026 1 day ago |
yanis_t 1 day ago |
lanycrost 1 day ago |
65 1 day ago |
undefined 1 day ago |
Maiko11 1 day ago |
localhoster 1 day ago |
plumocracy 1 day ago |
jphil529 1 day ago |
MrToBe 1 day ago |
EDM115 1 day ago |
simultsop 1 day ago |
TeriyakiBomb 1 day ago |
"We just ported Vite to ActionScript in 11 minutes, we swear for legit technical reasons"
rs_rs_rs_rs_rs 1 day ago |
LoganDark 1 day ago |
Given how every single acquisition like this has gone, especially lately, I look forward to seeing how quickly these products get left behind and unmaintained as their entire team move onto things at CF.
cpojer 1 day ago |
theaniketmaurya 1 day ago |
MrToBe 1 day ago |
orliesaurus 1 day ago |
bun, astro, uv ... all acquired.
Ok, what are the alternatives to vite/vitest?
pjmlp 1 day ago |
thrownaway561 1 day ago |
It's going to come down to "can I afford to keep doing this for nothing"?
So for all you high and mighty people calling them sell outs and what not, I would love to see how much you've been contributing to the project in order for it to keep going.
I think what CloudFlare is doing is a good thing. They get a tremendous team that they can have help work on their infrastructure while keeping the open source projects alive.
rvz 1 day ago |
Just like Bun, Astral and Astro, did VoidZero ever make any money?
If not then this is why open source alone is unsustainable, especially in the age of AI.
xyst about 21 hours ago |
desireco42 1 day ago |
xuzhenpeng 1 day ago |
7xmohamed 1 day ago |
infra_snowman 1 day ago |
kordlessagain 1 day ago |
hyeonggyu 1 day ago |
mmaunder 1 day ago |
hbwang2076 1 day ago |
throwaway613746 1 day ago |
glub103011 1 day ago |
onesingleblast 1 day ago |
3683826312819 1 day ago |
jheriko 1 day ago |
indiandeodorant 1 day ago |
Lapsa 1 day ago |
bakugo 1 day ago |
andrewstuart 1 day ago |
Evidently Evan You was an Art History + Studio Art and major and at Parsons School he had to pick up javascript to quickly show his work. During a stint at Creativelab5 at Google, he was so inspired to improve on AngularJS experience that he came up with Vue and the rest is history.
I have no idea what this Cloudflare acquisition will ultimately mean but I know I am so very grateful for the beautiful frameworks/tooling Evan and his team have cranked out over the years.