Whether he has any real solutions to the decay of modern software is, of course, another question. It makes intuitive sense that, since previous generations were able to develop efficient and pleasant-to-use software for much more constrained computers than the ones we now have, we can gain something by looking back to the past. But those previous generations of software also lacked things that we're no longer willing to give up -- security, accessibility, internationalization, etc. That doesn't mean we have to settle for the excesses of Electron, React, etc. But it does mean that, at least for software that needs qualities like the ones I listed above, we can't just go back to the ways software used to be developed for older computers. So, I think you're right about the danger of nostalgia.