Several replies to this thread are variants of "the web has too much tracking and ads. As a user I'd rather have a native app." That sounds silly, since a native app, even on iOS, can track you in all the ways a website can, plus all the ways that don't have Web APIs. However ...
There seems to be confusion about how, exactly, Apple keeps the web second-class on iOS. Understandable! It's the interplay of several interlocking effects. Let's examine them (thread).
3
4
13
I think some of them were also saying "the web has too much tracking and ads. As a user, I'd rather use a browser that tries to stop those things, and that's more important to me than a bunch of features that try to achieve native-app parity for the web platform."
2
2
I think people may have different impressions and actual behavior as far as portion of time spent in:
- native apps that need APIs that aren't on the web
- native apps that could be on the web (no key missing APIs)
- using the web.
Pressure between these comes from apps & users.
Nov 4, 2019 · 11:24 PM UTC
1
1

