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Making the page have empty margins by squeezing all the content into the middle of the page. When I started learning how to make website back in the 90's, this was considered a major no-no. It's really only done these days, because they focus entirely on how it looks on a phone held vertically than on an actual computer. But there's no reason to not have it use the space on devices that can see it.
Which is dumb because CSS allows you to change the design based off screen size, so it's 100% developer laziness.
I hate this so much - it usually ends up looking like shit on my phone while leaving huge empty margins on my monitor. Browser autoscaling usually just works - why do ui designers think they need to reinvent it … poorly?
I agree with this to some extent. For even wider lines of text occupying the entire desktop screen, it actually becomes hard for me to discern which line I am currently reading, causing me to start reading the entire line all over again.
Mobile-first is supposed to be a specific way of implementing responsive design, but I think a lot of people say "job done" after the first step and never get around to the whole responsive thing. I think it's easier to use a mobile layout on desktop than it is to use a desktop layout on mobile, so in that way I think mobile-first is a good principle to follow. But I agree, making a desktop layout that looks good is ignored far too much these days.