Sure but I consider coding your website to work correctly as a regular website to be a bare minimum requirement for me to want to use it. I’ve never used pixelfed and if their site doesn’t work well without being run as a pwa, then I probably never well.
I don’t think PWAs are necessarily at odds with this? One use case I could imagine is setting up a website that a parent or grandparent frequently uses as an app icon on their phone’s home screen, it can help avoid a lot of browsing UX hurdles people like us often take for granted
pixelfed offer an app and a responsive website; you can think of it as an open source and federated alternative to Instagram (I’m not sure why I use it besides welcoming people leaving meta’s services and up voting pictures of cats and dogs).
The web experience is technically more capable than the android app, which I believe uses react native anyway. Having it as a pwa kind of neatly tucks it away from my other browsing on my phone.
sort of like a more accessible bookmark, separated out so as to not get buried within 800 tabs (if you’re anything like my mum). it’s not anything groundbreaking in actual use, I guess it kind of just appifies a given webpage (there is some technical nuance that I’m kind of glossing over to assure standards compliance and help them perform better offline).
It can be kind of nice on a phone to eliminate some of the UI chrome given the limited screen real estate you have.
Sure but I consider coding your website to work correctly as a regular website to be a bare minimum requirement for me to want to use it. I’ve never used pixelfed and if their site doesn’t work well without being run as a pwa, then I probably never well.
I don’t think PWAs are necessarily at odds with this? One use case I could imagine is setting up a website that a parent or grandparent frequently uses as an app icon on their phone’s home screen, it can help avoid a lot of browsing UX hurdles people like us often take for granted
pixelfed offer an app and a responsive website; you can think of it as an open source and federated alternative to Instagram (I’m not sure why I use it besides welcoming people leaving meta’s services and up voting pictures of cats and dogs).
The web experience is technically more capable than the android app, which I believe uses react native anyway. Having it as a pwa kind of neatly tucks it away from my other browsing on my phone.
…A URL alias?
sort of like a more accessible bookmark, separated out so as to not get buried within 800 tabs (if you’re anything like my mum). it’s not anything groundbreaking in actual use, I guess it kind of just appifies a given webpage (there is some technical nuance that I’m kind of glossing over to assure standards compliance and help them perform better offline).
It can be kind of nice on a phone to eliminate some of the UI chrome given the limited screen real estate you have.