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by pzo
760 days ago
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I'm doing the opposite even though been ios dev for a decade and now learning react / react native. Reasons:
- golden days of mobile apps are gone, these days less and less people download apps - it is more important to have desktop / mobile web app these days - pwa and mobile apps and tech are slowly getting good enough - if you are native ios or android you are limiting your jobs and business opportunities - native mobile dev is like niche inside niche these days. Probably half of jobs is typescript/javascript/ python related. - in current market and ai landscape your have to prototype and ship fast to be competitive even at the cost of slighly worse UX |
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On what are you basing this? Every normal person I know picks a native app over a web app.
> - pwa and mobile apps and tech are slowly getting good enough
This has been claimed for well over a decade, yet I can't tell the difference as a consumer.
> - if you are native ios or android you are limiting your jobs and business opportunities - native mobile dev is like niche inside niche these days. Probably half of jobs is typescript/javascript/ python related.
Technically a brain surgeon has fewer job opportunities than a dentist, yet they make way more money.
> - in current market and ai landscape your have to prototype and ship fast to be competitive even at the cost of slighly worse UX
This is quite a generalization. I think that in some markets users will tolerate a worse UX, and in some markets UX is everything. My company has done quite well by not compromising UX.
I think it's a false dichotomy that you can either build fast with a web app or slow with a native app. I can build some things in SwiftUI way faster than if I used web technology.