There is certainly something to be debated about the convenience or inconvenience of Laravel 8 and the current implementation of Jetstream, especially given the extra requirements of getting your head around Livewire/Inertia to make sense of it, plus Sanctum for the auth stuff. Since my only reference was this site's course on Laravel 5/6/7 - it has certainly delayed my first implementations while I get comfortable with it. Others I know have also commented on the steeper learning curve. But compared with the days of building everything from scratch, or developing your own framework and reusable components, it's night and day. Thankfully, I don't have much baggage, so the only question for me is whether the new approach is reliable, efficient and secure, flexible and adaptable to my UX and styling aspirations, fast to implement, and well supported. Livewire, Tailwind, Alpine and Laravel give me a lot of confidence - while the idea of being entirely dependent on the kinds of explanations found on StackOverflow, MDN or PHP.net for vanilla coding really doesn't, however much it has been useful for me to build in vanilla in the past and understand and appreciate what's actually behind the TALL stack.
@bestmomo I installed your repo to take a look. I appreciate the chance to compare. @vincej Maybe Bootstrap is better now than when I used it before - I'll take a look. But for time saving - clearly Tailwind doesn't trump Bootstrap in that respect. It's a different approach to styling as far as I can see, but an investment of learning time that may not affect your productivity or creativity if you're used to Bootstrap. Personally, I certainly don't have the time to spend 20 years refining my knowledge of CSS, PHP, SQL, JS or jQuery in order to create something as polished and solid as these frameworks allow me to be with only days of study and practice.