SVG Fullstack Website

Dev crams a whole website into an image and commenters just want a link

TLDR: A developer squeezed a full web app into an SVG image, complete with storage and data sharing. The crowd mostly begged for a live demo instead of an 8‑minute video, splitting between “wildly clever” and “why though?” — a debate on usefulness versus showmanship.

SVGs are usually those crisp, tiny images for logos—but one developer went full mad scientist and stuffed an entire web app into an SVG: pages, styling, scripts, storage, even user data sharing and merging. Instead of dropping a live demo, they posted an 8‑minute YouTube [video](Link to the video), and the internet did what it does best: demand receipts. The loudest vibe? Impatience mixed with awe. Top comment by est cuts straight to it: “can you just host it on Github Pages instead of an 8-minute Youtube video?” Translation: we want to click, not watch.

From there, the crowd split. One camp calls it genius chaos—a flex that bends the web just to see if it snaps. The other camp: this is cursed, why put a whole house in a picture frame? Jokes flew in like confetti: “right‑click to save an app,” “the image‑based internet,” and “is this performance art?” Meanwhile, practical folks raised eyebrows about accessibility (can screen readers handle this?), searchability, and how anyone is supposed to maintain a website that’s literally an image. But the spectacle worked: it’s the kind of web stunt that makes you ask if the future is brilliant, broken, or both—and also why there isn’t a link yet.

Key Points

  • The project turns an SVG file into a complete website/web app.
  • It incorporates HTML, CSS, and JavaScript functionalities inside the SVG.
  • The app includes embedded storage capabilities.
  • It supports sharing and merging data between users.
  • The project is presented via a linked video.

Hottest takes

"can you just host it on Github Pages instead of an 8-minute Youtube video?" — est
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