It’s my, general, understanding that most people connect to the Internet through mobile apps.

If this is the case, then why have apps such as Remmel, Lemmur and jerboa taken a back seat?

IMHO, it would be a mistake to market Lemmy without these mobile apps functioning properly.

I have forked the three aforementioned mobile apps here and will try to ‘drum up’ support from developers wherever I can find them.

Please, if you don’t feel comfortable talking to me about this here, then send me a private message. Thank you.

  • Preston Maness ☭
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    52 years ago

    People defaulted to mobile apps over browsers because mobile websites used to suck. That early inertia has allowed mobile apps to dominate and stagnate over time. The internet would be a better place if there were far more functional mobile websites and far fewer mobile apps.

    But of course, it is all free software. There’s nothing stopping anyone from making a killer iPhone or Android app for Lemmy. Heck, there’s nothing stopping commercial entities from attempting to treat the entire stack like a commercial product, assuming they comply with the licenses.

    • @suspendedOP
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      02 years ago

      mobile websites

      Are you referring to websites that are mobile responsive?

      Maybe, there are developers out there that could make a mobile app experience ‘different’ than the browser experience. I believe there are.

      • @adrianmalacoda
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        72 years ago

        In my experience, the main reason mobile websites suck is because they do so by design, in order to push users to install an app. Lemmy developers have no incentive to do so.

        • @poVoq
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          1 year ago

          deleted by creator

      • Preston Maness ☭
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        42 years ago

        Are you referring to websites that are mobile responsive?

        Yes. My general philosophy is that, if it can be done in the browser, then it shouldn’t need an app. Leave mobile apps to the cases where the browser can’t get the job done.

        • @suspendedOP
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          32 years ago

          Using Lemmy on a smart phone with a browser should work fine since the site is built to be responsive. However, having a native Lemmy application for Android and iOS could provide opportunities for further feature development that isn’t included with the browser version. That is why I believe it is a good idea to keep these apps going.

          • erpicht
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            22 years ago

            What is the point of adding exclusive features to the mobile application? What sort of features should these be? Purely cosmetic?