|
|
|
|
|
by adam_arthur
1507 days ago
|
|
The fact that browser apps replaced desktop apps eventually kind of proves that the same on mobile is inevitable once computing power and efficiency is sufficient. Unless mobile vendors put up artificial barriers on functionality of web apps (Apple). At a certain hardware level, UX is not perceptibly different between native and Web based, yet development much easier with cross platform target |
|
IMHO, replacing something != proving something. We may have replaced desktop apps with browser-based apps somewhere, but that does not prove anything. I'm looking at a lot of professional software, that just won't perform as a browser app (or work at all) in the near future. And then I look at a lot of crap browser-based software (like MS Teams) that makes me wonder whether this was actually an advancement, because it absolutely does not feel like it. It's UX is just miserable and so slow.