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by kaslai
1544 days ago
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I think a "web app" should definitely be able to have some sort of more properly integrated filesystem API, but a "web page" has no business having access to such a thing. There just hasn't been a line drawn in the sand between the two, so every "web page" has all the capabilities of a "web app" by default. Personally I wish there would be a meaningful line drawn between the two so that users could have a nice shorthand for allowing web pages to "upgrade" into apps which have access to things like WebGL and filesystem access. Such a thing would only have any meaning to power users and privacy oriented people though, and the general trend in browser design has been to spurn such users in favor of reducing friction for everyone else at all costs. |
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Javascript isn't the new Java. Web browsers are the new Java.
I would be very much in favor of a way to draw a line between "content" on the web and "apps" delivered by the web. I don't know what form that would take. But it will probably never happen because the FAANGs that run the web these days are actively opposed to any way to deliver content over the web that doesn't also let them include apps to track your activities online.