Often it's because the teams of product managers, designers, and native mobile engineers in those companies are fully focused on the same mobile experience, while the web team has a split focus, and tends to be more focused on desktop web (where they inevitably do their primary testing and QA) than mobile web.
Ugh, I run a B2B SaaS app that's mobile friendly, but people keep asking for an app (and I really do need push notifications, I'm spending thousands per month on text messages right now), but I've been putting it off. Did the App Stores have issues with you publishing just a simple RN wrapper app?
No issues at all. I have two tabs in the RN app. One tab is basically the entire app, which is just an embedded web view. The other tab is a basic account tab (sign in, log out, delete account, cancel plan). I also have native auth and native payments.
I'm not 100% sure yet, but I might regret using React-Native over Capacitor. I have to bridge things like auth and payments between the web view and the native app. For example, the web app has a flow where you need to login, so it opens the login modal. If you're inside the mobile app, instead of doing that, it sends a message up to the native app to open the native app's login modal. Then once login is complete, the native app sends a message into the webview with the auth token. Similar thing for payments. That all works great, but occasionally I want to make a breaking change. Since it takes many weeks to get an update rolled out everyone, I have to keep the webapp backwards compatible for a long time. That slows down iterating on stuff like AB testing checkout flows. I don't think I'd have to worry about this if I was using Capacitor because the native functionality would be mostly driven from the webapp code.
I suspect that what happens, during this "daily checkin," is that the app sends a bunch of encrypted data that it got from your device, to the servers in China.
What information do you think they got from your device other than what you gave them permission to have? If you actually have any info on how apps can break Apple's sandbox to leak your personal info, you should share it.
The EU considers breaking the rules and confiscating state and private assets normal to apply some political pressure on the opponent. They should expect US to do the same, because why not, especially under Trump. Given this, it's stupid to hold state's gold reserves in the US.
"apply some political pressure on the opponent" being applied to Russia for a military invasion of a neighboring country is very different than applying to the US, one of Germany's biggest allies and trading partners. I recognize that is changing, and I don't blame Germany at all for questioning whether it's a good idea to continue to hold their gold in the US, but the comparison to the EU seizing Russian assets after Russia launched a full scale invasion of a European country, is pretty specious.
Oβ¦Kβ¦ I will expand on that, but you seem to be looking for a fight, so Iβm not sure Iβm going to enjoy this thread. Here we are:
It is surprising to me in a bad way that someone thinks the relationship between the US and the EU (who have traditionally been allies) has become so adversarial that someone would compare it to the relationship between Russia and the EU.
The comment was: the EU should expect the US to hammer them the same way they hammered Russia.
And my point was, that would be a significant course change because for the US & EU to be like Russia & EU would be a significant change.
But this guy googled it and apparently there are 18% of Japanese people not working, so obviously their entire society pivoting towards automation is wrong.
Yep. In a society with an aging population and a low birth rate, people who would prefer to be full-time parents staying home and raising their kids ought to instead be doing undesirable, monotonous, easily-automatable jobs that robots can do. Or at least two families could agree to pay each other to raise the other's children, so that it counts as employment, rather than raising their own. Yes, maximizing labor force participation... That's how things ought to be.
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