The post gave some use cases involving hardware that can't easily run Desktop VSCode (e.g. Even if it works 99% of the time, that 1% would add enough friction to make it more of a hassle then it's worth. The browser version will always be a compromised experience, given the inherent limitations of browser applications. Downloading and installing an application is not a particularly big ask for the type of people who use VSCode. This seems really cool, and seems like it took a lot of man hours to put together. If you'd be interested in letting me make up for that terrible conversation in 2018, you can reach me at Thanks for sharing this feedback, and letting us know where we can do better. In fact, I'd love to connect and hear your thoughts, to make sure we're going in the right direction. Now that we have Codespaces, v/v, and Live Share support for the web, we're actually looking to further optimize our support for education, since we believe we have a lot to offer. A web client for collaboration, with zero-install/onboarding, has always been our north star, and so your intuition/feedback was 100% right back in 2018. the GitHub Classroom extension for VS Code). I'm actually a PM for both Live Share, Codespaces, and some of our education-related experiences (e.g. I'm really sorry to hear you had this experience :( I'm not sure who you spoke with, but this perspective definitely isn't representative of the team and/or how I'd ever want to see us talk with developers.
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