As Webassembly makes progress, have you seen any interesting applications of the technology, even just concept demos? Share them with us!
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As Webassembly makes progress, have you seen any interesting applications of the technology, even just concept demos? Share them with us!
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
Alex (The Engineering Bolt) โก -
Jen Looper -
Fortune Nabhel Harmony -
Shelley Benhoff -
Top comments (23)
Google Earth is a solid proof of concept.
Also, sandspiel is pretty neat, implemented in Rust. His blog post about the project is a good read.
Wow! I read the post about how they made Google Earth and how they've dealt with the different capabilities of WebAssembly powered browsers. Can't wait for multi threaded Wasm to come back to Firefox :D
I skimmed the Sandspiel post and it's absolutely impressive. It's a journey in software architecture, optimization, game design and more stuff. I'll have to read it again more closely. Love how he embodied the spirit of WebAssembly by structuring the code that needed to be in Rust with Rust and the code that was good enough in JS, in JS. Also loved the dig at Firestore, which isn't cheap :D
Thanks for the links!
Agreed on both points, but especially the sandspiel post - truly an impressive recap! I like how well it demonstrates the use of wasm as one part of a complete system - I'd wager most wasm apps will look more or less like that as opposed to an all-or-nothing deal. The WebGL stuff is totally foreign to me too, but super cool to see how he was able to seamlessly integrate all these complex moving parts.
For more info about Google Earth and their migration to WebAssembly:
softwareengineeringdaily.com/2019/...
Wow, absolutely! I feel like Google will always be able to flex in this way. Sandspiel is really cool too.
One that I always hear about is AutoCAD for the web. They were able to compile existing code from their 35-year old C++ application to WebAssembly. I think bringing existing resource-intensive desktop applications to the web is going to be a huge use case.
blogs.autodesk.com/autocad/autocad...
squoosh is one of them
I love squoosh
Pyodide Python notebook in the browser is interesting. I keep hearing excitement from C# developers about Blazor and one day replacing JavaScript. Who knows if that day comes?
figma. definitely.
I'll shamelessly sell promote here, but I made ozdevevents.azurefd.net/ which is a React + WASM (in Go) hybrid that shows a list of technical conferences in Australia by parsing a markdown file.
aaronpowell / oz-dev-events
An experiment with WebAssembly + Go on how to build it into a normal web dev pipeline
Australian Tech Events
This is the source code for the Australian Tech Events website, a web UI over the top of the Readify DevEvents markdown files.
I build this mainly as an exercise in learning how to use Go and WebAssembly, and how they can fit into a modern web developer toolchain.
At the end of the day this is a React.js application, written in TypeScript, using webpack to compile and bundle the code.
The Code
The code lives in the
src
folder, with both the TypeScript and Go code all within there. To illustrate the nature of using Go with WebAssembly there is also a Go application that lives insrc/markdown-tools/app
, that loads up the core of the Go codebase (markdown-tools.go
) and executes a request against a markdown file.Running locally
To run it locally you'll need to have the following installed:
Figma makes use of webassemly I believe, which is how/why their web app performs like a native desktop application.
Am also fairly certain the browser versions of games output by Godot are webassemly, at least in part.
Mozillas Arch Sculpture at the 2018 JSConf EU: hacks.mozilla.org/2018/06/babys-fi...
Ebay Bar Code Scanner
This is quite impressive - s3.amazonaws.com/mozilla-games/tmp... - a few years old now though. Also this - s3.amazonaws.com/mozilla-games/Zen...