• @warmaster
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    61 year ago

    I’m sure they have thought of this, I wonder if they plan to use web apps, or Waydroid, or something else.

    Also, there’s a chance mobile Linux could benefit from sponsorships, contributions, etc

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      It’s in the article. Web based stuff with REACT.

      Edit: It’s REACT Native. Just read the fucking article, people.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        Oh man PWA as a replace to traditional apps have been promised for a while. On one hand the promise of write once run anywhere on the other less ability to lock down your app from your users (good for us, but not popular in the mobile space at the moment)

        • @Phrodo_00
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          51 year ago

          Firefox did it like 10 years ago. I think it’s still going around under a different name in very low tier smart phones.

          • @[email protected]
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            41 year ago

            You’re likely thinking KaiOS. They are still contributing what is required under MPL-2.0 but the rest is proprietary. KaiOS 3.x finally got off of a browser from 2016 as the base, but very few have upgraded their apps to be compatible (the tweaks were minor) & others have used it as a reminder that they were still ‘supporting’ a platform like whoever is maintaining or using that WhatsApp thing for chat.

            There’s also Capyloon built from B2G, but it’s still early on & is targeting touch phones, instead of feature phones.

            It would be nice to see it around IMO since it’d just be another enhancement to progressive web applications & JavaScript is a better target than Java or Swift.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          promise of write once run anywhere

          PWAs are great if they’re written well, especially if they allow offline access.

          There’s platforms like React Native where the apps are native on each platform (they use native UI widgets). You can’t just run the same code, but you can reuse probably 90-95% of code across platforms.