That what people said about the early growth in windows phones too.
I literally remember standing there listening a microsoft rep tell me that 'When you don't have much market share, there's always room for great growth".
...just saying, you can spin the story however you like, but the fact is that Vue currently has a reasonably insignificant market share.
More that 9% and growing at more than 100% per year doesn't seem insignificant at all.
Windows phone arrived briefly at just over 3% and then immediately declined.
The comparison between vue.js and windows phone doesn't make sense at all.
> As of the third quarter of 2013, Gartner reported that Windows Phone holds a worldwide market share of 3.6%, up 123% from the same period in 2012 and outpacing Android's rate of growth.
Sound familiar? (and I assure you, that 3.6% is a whole lot more than a 135k measly installs a day).
:P
That's called 'unsustainable small scale growth'; and it's what you're seeing with vue right now.
A good year over year growth of 2 or 3% is far far far more compelling than a tiny 100% growth rate from nothing to nothing.
Sure, maybe vue and windows phone are different beasts and they're difficult to compare... but the comparison to chrome makes zero sense either at this point.
This '100% growth' stuff is pure hand waving nonsense. Its obviously unsustainable.
The question is, can vue turn its current trend into a sustainable consistent growth and take on react? I dunno, but I can guarantee you the answer to that question is something that no one knows at this point.
I literally remember standing there listening a microsoft rep tell me that 'When you don't have much market share, there's always room for great growth".
...just saying, you can spin the story however you like, but the fact is that Vue currently has a reasonably insignificant market share.
Beyond that, all we can do is speculate.