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Next Phase Montage
tl;dr ā Good news!
npm, Inc., is being purchased by GitHub.
The public registry remains public, free, and as available as ever.
npm as you know it continues, and in fact, there is good reason to believe that itāll only get better.
Iām still going to be working on npm (but with the luxury of more resources and less stress).
Iām really excited about the stuff weāre going to do.
It is customary for a founder, in the closing chapter of their startup, to ruminate in a blog post about their incredible journey1. When we founded npm, Inc., I knew that I was signing up for a post like this someday. Iām extremely thankful that this is the one I get to write2.
history and origin
Back in 2009, after too long without a vacation, I quit my job, in hopes of discovering what happens when I untether my creativity.
What happened is I wrote a package manager.
I created npm with the goal of sharing modules in a tiny group of nerdy weirdos whoād decided to write web servers in JavaScript. From that niche beginning, npm grew, slowly but surely, the background project Iād greedily steal away time for.
At the end of 2013, npm hit a rough spot and we had to make a decision. This was the first big bookmark in the npm story, when the project could no longer survive on donations. We made some slide decks and raised an amount of money that seemed enormous at the time, but inevitably got spent really fast.
the part where i talk about startups
Running a company is hard. It is grueling, unglamorous work.
I donāt want to make it sound completely terrible. There are definitely a few awesome parts. But once is enough for me.
Throughout this journey, our north star has been the mission that we founded this company with: reduce friction in JavaScript software development.
I have a set of goals that I wrote down back then, and have shared openly with the team. They havenāt changed much.
Keep the npm registry running forever (not only for the life of the company).
Be a company that we can all enjoy working at, and do the best work of our careers up until now.
Get a big enough exit that I can quit my job and see what comes out of me a second time.
Share the rewards equitably with the people who got npm to where it is.
There are few unmitigated successes or failures in the real world. But this is a win, and a good one, for me and the team and the entire JavaScript community.
We have made tremendous progress on (1), and thatās the thing Iām happiest about in this. As far as (2), thereās been ups and downs, to say the least, but the bright spots outshine the dark. Iāve lost some valued friendships in the process, but made a few as well. On (3), well, Iām still working a jobby job, but I always knew that was a long shot, and āmake npm a better package managerā is a job I enjoy. And as for (4), Iām proud of the deals that weāve been able to negotiate for the team.
Itās not a kajillion billion dollar 10x startup cinderella story, and weāve taken our hits, but in the end weāve done right by our community, team, and careers, and Iām extremely proud of what weāve achieved.
the part where i talk about the company buying us
One of the questions founders get asked a lot is āwhat might your exit look like?ā I always mentioned the big tech companies as possibilities, and GitHub as a sort of āwishful thinkingā option.
Iāve been following GitHubās trajectory closely since they came to Yahoo! to give a talk about git and social coding way back in 20093. Itās been a huge part of my life ever since I dove head-first into open source as a lifestyle choice.
When I saw the GitHub Packages beta announcement and demo at GitHub HQ in San Francisco, I remember turning to Shanku Niyogi and clumsily blurting out, āWhy arenāt you trying to buy us?ā
It seemed so maddeningly⦠obvious. Forget about whose logo is on which webpage, just⦠if youāre going to do this thing, do it right, ffs. This clearly needs to be integrated with the actual registry in a very deep way. āI mean⦠You see that, right?ā (I think he probably did. And if he didnāt, then props to him for taking my reaction as flattery or a good idea, rather than condescension.)
What I didnāt really expect at the beginning of the acquisition process was how much Iād genuinely like everyone I met at GitHub, starting with my initial conversations with Nat, as well as all the people on the team heās built. As we dug into the technical and strategic plans for how npm would fit into the vision of GitHub moving forward, it became clear that this isnāt just a good option for the JavaScript community ā itās significantly better than what npm, Inc., can provide on its own.
There are not many companies that can claim to have the kind of fanatical commitment to open source that GitHub does. In the track record of Nat and the team heās assembled, thereās really something special here that Iām thrilled to be a part of.
Iāve said countless times before that I wouldnāt let the registry go someplace that wonāt take care of it. (See goal (1) above. Iāve sacrificed years of my life and put a strain on many personal and professional relationships in pursuit of that goal.)
As GitHub has branched out into other aspects of the end-to-end developer community experience, itās natural to see how the JavaScript package management process fits into that story. Itās not a loss leader or an experimental add-on or a way to quickly hire a team. Rather, the npm registry is a significant and concrete strategic asset serving GitHubās mission of eliminating transaction costs in software development.
Thatās important.
the part about what comes next
Today, npm serves over 1.3 million packages to roughly 12 million developers, who download these things 75 billion times a month, and all of this is growing at a rate that ensures these massive numbers will seem small in a few years.
Our commitment to that community is to keep the npm registry free for open source development for the foreseeable future, and continue to improve the npm CLI. At GitHub, npm will have the added support and backing of one of the worldās largest companies, behind the worldās largest community of developers.
There are some awesome opportunities for improvement in the npm experience, to meaningfully improve life for JS devs in countless large and small ways. Weāll be making things more reliable, convenient, and connected for everyone across our vast interdependent JavaScript ecosystem.
For six years, in the grind of a startup, weāve had dreams too big to dare hope for. This next chapter is a chance to realize those dreams.
This is the end of ānpm, Inc.ā, the Delaware C Corp. But itās an exciting upgrade for npm.
[1]: Reference joke Our Incredible Journey
[2]: Itās also worth noting that GitHub allowed such a long, nuanced, and candid announcement as this one, and didnāt push for a watered down corporate version. Cultural alignment is a good sign.
[3]: Check out the date on the post for that talk. Then note the date on this commit. Itās like some kind of cryptic message from the past, and itās weirding me out, tbh.
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