(Note: Some of these were edited out of the post several days after it was posted. Other, equally obvious, anachronisms remain.)
To rule out alternative explanations, here is a selection of quotes which were clearly written several years ago, and the author hasn't made any effort to update:
With the release of ES6 [...] many expect the same cycle to repeat again.
Not "the wide availability of...", the release of. That was 6 years ago.
Angular and Angular 2
"Angular 2" was renamed simply "Angular" (with "AngularJS" referring to the previous framework) sometime between 2015 and 2017 (when version 4 was released), and is now on version 13.
This mirrors the situation of JS/ES itself - there has been a new version every year since 2015, so if you wanted to talk about what was supported by modern browsers, there is a host of even better features you could talk about. This is not even hinted at in the blog post.
Ember and Vue and Aurelia ... Finally, a quick note about some less well-known, and less well-used, frameworks.
Ember and Vue were both fairly new when this article was presumably written, so may have seemed less popular. Both now regularly appear in lists of "most popular JS frameworks". (Aurelia does not seem to have made it to that category).
This is the context, then, in which ES6 is being released.
Note the present tense; I can't see how to interpret this as something you could honestly write in 2021.
In addition, support for ES6 modules in browsers is not going to appear anytime soon
This feature is widely supported. This is probably the most damning evidence against interpreting this as looking back at ES6 now it's widely deployed - if this was about wider support in browsers, what's this sentence doing there?
My initial assumption was that the article was posted by mistake, but some links do appear to have been added or updated. As others have pointed out, some links are from 2017 rather than 2015, suggesting this was "dusted off" more than once.
The only explanation I can think of is that someone has done an extremely lazy update on an old blog post.
It doesn't help that the blog post wasn't even particularly well-written in the first place. Maybe it was originally submitted and rejected, and standards have slipped in the intervening years?