| I included a lot of links to my previous posts over ten years explaining what it means in lots of detail with many different words and numerous examples and citations. Did you read any of them? Did you read my other explanation below that I just wrote personally for your benefit? Does it make any sense to you? Do you understand what I mean now, or do you need me to give you some more citations of other times I've written the same thing, because there are more. What was unclear, and did I leave anything out? Do you have any more questions I haven't answered time and again and already gave you links to but you just didn't bother reading? It's exasperating and insulting that you blithely dismiss what I wrote without saying what you disagree with or can't understand, but I promise you, it really is easy to understand and extremely obvious on its face, if you will just take the time to read what I wrote, before complaining you don't know what it means. If you have time to complain, then you have time to read what I wrote and linked to, before complaining you don't know what it means. If you're too busy to read, then please don't waste your and my time complaining you don't understand what you didn't bother to read. |
My experience with making an app work consistently across browsers is that it's hard work. Making it also work consistently with each OS it runs on is considerably harder. You want to guess how many times I've been asked to even consider either of those two things by a manager, let alone make them a priority? Never.
And going by my experience as a user of browser-based software, I'd say that's pretty normal across the industry.
And that's to say nothing of the fact that these apps are typically slow, cumbersome (by which I mean they throttle my CPU and drain my laptop battery), and crash no less frequently than unsafe apps written in unsafe languages like C (despite the fact that that's supposed to be impossible).
It seems to me that you want to rewrite the world in the browser. That doesn't seem very different to me from rewriting the world in Wayland. Whatever the differences between the two, they are insignificant besides the fallacy of rewriting the world.
As for the rest of your reply, I have no idea why you think I owe you however much time it would take me to read however many links you posted above. If you have something relevant to say, say it in the thread. Don't presume to leave it for me as a homework assignment.