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I think basic Bootstrap is great for small projects, experiments, open source projects that don't have a designer on bard, etc. and for bigger things, it's a great base to build from.

Bootstrap's strength is that you can use to to quickly build a uniform, fully functional, cohesive and clean UI.

Just because you can, it doesn't mean you have to.... and just because you don't have to, doesn't mean you shouldn't. It needs to be evaluated on a per-project basis, like anything else we do. Some tools and services really call for a custom look. Some, let's be honest, just don't.

I see things like internal tools being a great example of when to use Boostrap's defaults--that web app to visualize analytics on your data, your ticketing system, that private web interface you built for your Git repositories, the documentation manager, etc. Use Bootstrap, be cool with it, free up your designers and creative energy to roll out custom layouts on your client-facing pages.




I think you hit the nail on the head!




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