1) It is a product that exists, maintenance is easier than building from scratch in this case.
2) a consolidated effort by many people in maintaining a fork will allow much more effort than gitlab alone can spend.
3) mindshare on how vscode works already exists externally, a new webIDE doesn't have the same level of developer mindshare anyway.
As a paying gitlab customer I'd rather their money be spent on things that actually matter; reimplementing open source tools does not matter.
1) It is a product that exists, maintenance is easier than building from scratch in this case.
2) a consolidated effort by many people in maintaining a fork will allow much more effort than gitlab alone can spend.
3) mindshare on how vscode works already exists externally, a new webIDE doesn't have the same level of developer mindshare anyway.
As a paying gitlab customer I'd rather their money be spent on things that actually matter; reimplementing open source tools does not matter.