In this episode we discuss our journey from static and CMS driven sites to reactive frameworks, specifically Vue.js.\nSegment 1 - Static to Reactive\nStarted by creating simple static sites - no need for reactive elements\nWhen dynamic/reactive content was needed we would use document.createElement\nSegment 2 - CMS to Reactive\nWe would use Wordpress, CouchCMS, or Webflow for any content management that our users would need\nEventually elements became too varied and a dynamic solution was needed - reactive frameworks\nThe "Hub" presented a unique issue of not having a standard layout while still being "posts" (the episode clarifies this point)\nSegment 3 - How We Plan to Use Vue.js\nQuick start guide for people to get up and running\nHexDash a collaborative project that people can contribute to\nVue.js components - great for reusability\nVue.js will be used in the making of the HTML All The Things website\nSegment 4 - Matt's Experience Getting Quickly Started with Vue.js\nMoving over from a typical experience using vanilla HTML/CSS/JS, SASS, Bootstrap, Webflow, or CouchCMS\nPrior experience with CLI and NPM\nFirst time using Visual Studio Code\nWeb News - Trendy & Loud vs Silence\nNodeJS vs PHP\nBig frameworks vs old ones\nWordPress power 31% of the internet (Source: https://wordpress.com)\nWordPress vs Webflow\nWorkflow conflicts\n\nAre freelancers using bleeding edge technology, while the rest of the industry (specifically big enterprise) still using "old" tech?