Astro is Joining Cloudflare (Here's Why)

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00:00:00Astro is joining Cloudflare, so if you're keeping track at home, this now means that Cloudflare has Astro,
00:00:05Vercel has Next.js but also Nuxt and Svelte, Google has Angular, Microsoft have Blazor,
00:00:10and everybody gets a framework. In all honesty though, this news does seem like a good thing,
00:00:14so let's just jump right in, talk about what this news is and what this means for Astro going forward.
00:00:19I'll start with a quick recap of what Astro is for those of you that might not know.
00:00:28Astro is an open-source web framework but not a UI one, this is sometimes misunderstood,
00:00:33and you can actually still use React, Vue, Svelte or Solid with Astro. What Astro provides as its
00:00:38main selling point is making it incredibly easy to build content-driven sites like blogs,
00:00:42documentation or e-commerce and making those sites incredibly performant. And its main way of doing
00:00:48that is rendering the site on the server and sending static HTML to the client with the least amount of
00:00:53JavaScript needed so the initial load is very fast especially when compared to some of the other
00:00:58options. Now there's obviously loads more to Astro than just that and in fact we've covered a few of
00:01:03the features on this channel so subscribe for more great content like this and it's also worth noting
00:01:07Astro can handle more complexity with its island architecture that help popularize but the main
00:01:12thing that you need to know for this story is it makes content-driven sites very fast and that's
00:01:16why companies like Google, OpenAI and of course Cloudflare use it for things like their blog posts,
00:01:21their marketing pages and their documentation. Even me too, I use it personally for my blog which
00:01:26I haven't updated in years but that is definitely not Astro's fault. So with that bit of context then
00:01:31we're at this blog post from the founder of Astro announcing that they're joining Cloudflare and I'll
00:01:36just start out with the important bits for those of you that use Astro or want to in the future
00:01:40and that is the key promises in this announcement. The first one is that it will stay open source and
00:01:45actively maintained. The second is that it will continue to support other deployment options not
00:01:49just Cloudflare so hopefully there's no feelings of vendor lock-in like many people feel with Next.js
00:01:54but Vercel does try and deny and also the open governance and roadmap are going to stay the exact
00:01:59same with the entire team over at Astro now working at Cloudflare full-time on Astro. So that's pretty
00:02:05good news for everyone over there which I am very happy to see. But why join Cloudflare then? Well
00:02:10the answer to that is pretty similar to some of the other stories that we've heard recently. While
00:02:14Astro is an MIT licensed open source web framework it's backed by the Astro technology company which
00:02:21is VC backed aka it needs to make some money. Now the original idea was that Astro would sit at the
00:02:27center of a massive developer platform with optional hosted primitives like database storage analytics
00:02:32all designed in lockstep with the framework. As Fred says attempts to introduce paid hosted primitives
00:02:38into the ecosystem fell flat and rarely justified their own existence. Nothing clicked with the users
00:02:44the same way that Astro did and in fact we've seen similar stories to this with other projects
00:02:49like Tailwind and BUN where they perform really well as an open source tool but not so much as
00:02:54a company. Astro has actually been doubling in downloads every year and it's now at nearly a
00:02:58million per week but I imagine that revenue probably wasn't as successful. So that answers why Astro was
00:03:04probably looking for a new place to keep up with the maintenance cost of Astro but why Cloudflare
00:03:09and what do Cloudflare want with Astro? Well they actually realized they'd been working towards the
00:03:14same goal from different angles. Cloudflare has always been about solving the fast web problem
00:03:18from the infrastructure side of things and Astro has been trying to solve it from the framework side
00:03:23and now together they can do both. Plus Cloudflare was already a long time sponsor of Astro even using
00:03:29it themselves for their documentation, their workers landing page and a bunch of their marketing sites
00:03:33so the team over there is already very familiar with it so it's not just an opportunity to buy
00:03:38a framework they actually like the goal of Astro and want it to thrive and I also like Cloudflare
00:03:43as a host for Astro as they do have a decent track record. They sponsor projects like Honno and
00:03:49Tanstack and they haven't tried to lock them down onto only that platform so I think they have some
00:03:53good precedent for keeping things nice and open. And finally in Cloudflare's blog post we also get
00:03:58another reason why they might be interested in Astro and that is because they've already seen
00:04:02a trend of Astro and Cloudflare being used together in the new world of AI. There's tools like Webflow
00:04:08Cloud, Wixvibe and Stainless that all use Cloudflare and Astro together demonstrating that it's a good
00:04:12fit for both of them and there's a demand for this synergy of Astro and Cloudflare so it really does
00:04:18seem like it's going to be a great home for Astro and going forward Astro doesn't have to worry about
00:04:23where they're making their money from they can fully focus on making Astro the best web framework
00:04:28for content driven websites and in fact Astro 6 just hit beta which looks really cool so subscribe
00:04:33for when we have a video on that and that's really all there is to this news. I am very excited to see
00:04:38what's coming from Astro now that they can fully focus on it. Let me know what you think in the comments
00:04:42below, why they're subscribed and as always see you in the next one.

Key Takeaway

Astro is joining Cloudflare to secure its financial future while remaining an open-source, vendor-agnostic framework dedicated to high-performance, content-driven web development.

Highlights

Astro is officially joining Cloudflare

Timeline

Introduction and the Framework Landscape

The speaker opens by announcing that Astro is joining Cloudflare, placing it among other major tech companies that own or sponsor web frameworks. He notes that Vercel has Next.js, Google has Angular, and Microsoft has Blazor, suggesting a trend where every major platform now has its own framework. This news is presented as a positive development for the web development community. The segment sets the stage for a deeper dive into what this acquisition means for Astro's future. It establishes the context of the current competitive landscape in web development.

What is Astro? Performance and Architecture

This section provides a technical recap of Astro, clarifying that it is an open-source web framework specifically designed for content-driven sites. Unlike traditional UI frameworks, Astro allows developers to use React, Vue, or Svelte while prioritizing performance through server-side rendering and minimal JavaScript. The speaker mentions "island architecture" as a key feature that Astro helped popularize to handle complex interactivity. High-profile users like Google, OpenAI, and Cloudflare are cited as examples of the framework's industry adoption. This section explains why Astro is valued for its speed and efficiency in rendering static HTML.

Key Promises and the Shift to Cloudflare

The speaker outlines the critical promises made by Astro's founder during the announcement of the move to Cloudflare. First and foremost, Astro will remain open source and actively maintained by the same team, who are now full-time Cloudflare employees. Crucially, the framework will continue to support various deployment options to avoid the "vendor lock-in" often associated with competitors like Next.js and Vercel. The roadmap and governance structure are expected to remain unchanged despite the change in ownership. This part of the video aims to reassure the existing developer community that the tool they rely on will not become proprietary.

The Business Reality: Why Astro Needed a Buyer

The narrative shifts to the financial motivations behind the acquisition, noting that Astro was previously a VC-backed technology company. Despite massive growth in downloads—reaching nearly one million per week—the company struggled to monetize its "hosted primitives" like databases and analytics. The speaker compares this situation to other successful open-source tools like Tailwind and Bun, which perform well as tools but face challenges as standalone businesses. Fred Schott, Astro's founder, is quoted explaining that paid ecosystem features rarely justified their own existence. This context explains why finding a stable corporate home like Cloudflare was a strategic necessity for the project's longevity.

The Synergy Between Cloudflare and Astro

The speaker explores why Cloudflare is a natural fit for Astro, highlighting their shared goal of creating a faster web experience. Cloudflare approaches this from the infrastructure side, while Astro approaches it from the framework side, creating a powerful combination. Cloudflare has been a long-time sponsor of the project and already uses Astro for its own internal documentation and marketing pages. This pre-existing relationship suggests that the acquisition is based on genuine technical alignment rather than just a financial transaction. The speaker expresses confidence in Cloudflare's track record of supporting open-source projects like Hono and TanStack without forcing platform restrictions.

Future Outlook and Final Thoughts

The final segment discusses the future of the partnership, noting a growing trend of Astro and Cloudflare being used together in new AI-driven web tools. Examples such as Webflow Cloud and Stainless are mentioned to demonstrate the existing demand for this specific synergy. By joining Cloudflare, the Astro team can now focus entirely on framework development without the pressure of generating immediate revenue. The video concludes with an announcement that Astro 6 is currently in beta, signaling continued innovation under the new ownership. The speaker encourages viewers to stay tuned for future updates on the framework's evolution.

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