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Useful tools for web application development

A 2011 list of dev tools, fully reset for 2026 — the languages, frameworks, hosting platforms, and AI assistants that make up a working full-stack toolkit when an Irish business needs more than a brochure site.

The 2011 version of this article was a different world: shared LAMP hosting, jQuery as your front-end framework, MySQL as the only sensible database, FTP as the deployment method. By 2026 the stack has changed top to bottom.

Front-end frameworks

  • Astro — for content-led sites with islands of interactivity.
  • Next.js (React) — for full-stack web applications. Mature ecosystem, broad hireable developer pool.
  • SvelteKit — lighter alternative to Next.js. Excellent developer experience.
  • Remix — full-stack React framework focused on web standards.
  • Vue / Nuxt — still strong, particularly for teams that prefer Vue's mental model over React's.

Backend frameworks

  • Laravel — PHP, mature, broad Irish developer pool, well-suited to typical SMB applications.
  • Django — Python, batteries-included, particularly strong for data-heavy applications.
  • Ruby on Rails — still excellent for back-office-heavy apps.
  • Hono / Elysia / Fastify — modern Node.js options for API-first builds.
  • FastAPI — Python, async, growing fast, particularly for ML-adjacent applications.

Databases

  • PostgreSQL — the default. Open-source, full-featured, available everywhere.
  • SQLite — for embedded use, small applications, and increasingly for production via Litestream/Turso replication.
  • Redis / KeyDB — caching and session storage.
  • Managed Postgres providers — Neon, Supabase, Fly.io Postgres, RDS.

Hosting and deployment

  • Vercel — frictionless deployment for Next.js / front-end applications.
  • Netlify — similar; particularly good for static-site builds.
  • Cloudflare Pages / Workers — edge-first, generous free tier.
  • Fly.io — for traditional applications that need long-running servers and proper databases.
  • Hetzner / DigitalOcean — for VPS-backed deployments. Cheaper at scale; requires Linux administration.
  • cPanel hosting (Blacknight, WebWorld) — still the right choice for many small Irish business sites.

Version control and CI/CD

  • Git + GitHub / GitLab — non-negotiable for any serious project.
  • GitHub Actions — adequate CI/CD for most projects.

Monitoring and error tracking

  • Sentry — error tracking. Mandatory once a project is in production.
  • UptimeRobot / Better Uptime — uptime monitoring.
  • Plausible / Matomo / Fathom — privacy-respecting analytics.
  • Logflare / Axiom — application logs you can search.

Security and ops basics

  • Let's Encrypt for free auto-renewing SSL.
  • Cloudflare for DNS, CDN, basic WAF.
  • 1Password / Bitwarden for team password management.
  • 2FA on every account. Hardware keys for admin accounts.

The AI-augmented additions

  • Claude / ChatGPT for pair programming, debugging help, and explanation of unfamiliar libraries.
  • GitHub Copilot / Cursor for in-IDE code completion and refactoring.
  • Bolt / v0 / Lovable for rapid prototyping.

One caveat: AI tools produce code that looks right and is occasionally wrong in subtle ways. Code review still matters — possibly more than ever.

What 2011 had that's now obsolete

  • jQuery as a default front-end framework.
  • FTP as a deployment method (replaced by Git-based deploys).
  • Shared LAMP hosting as the default for new applications.
  • MySQL as the obvious database choice (Postgres took over).
  • Adobe ColdFusion, Microsoft Silverlight, Adobe Flex (all dead or deprecated).

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