I wonder if it could really work as advertized... how many problems could be found making a static website, even on a medium size WP? And what about dynamic content such as comments, search, filters or other specific plugins?
That's an great question. Most WordPress websites are just "brochure websites": they don't expose anything dynamic to their visitors excluding comments, contact forms and search functionality. We already handle these scenarios out-of-the box. Also, every plugin you use that does not have any front-facing components, it's perfectly fine. It's not a hosting solution for every possible WordPress website out there, but it can handle a huge slice of the market, with big benefits for agencies/freelances.
for the record: in the second paragraph we can find this sentence:
> we’ve been working with Angular for almost nine months now (the original article in italian is dated February 2015)
it means this post is just a translation of something experienced a year ago (Angular 1.1)
A half of the comments reply to solutions arrived on 1.4, with hindsight.
This delay is definitely not clear, but casts new light on the content.
sure for the first and second points; I don't like pomodoro so much but I always need a time tracker and something to check the time I'm spending daily. This has been really usefull.