Despite my blowhardedness, this is probably the right choice. The mobile web is getting better and better. Has GitHub ever talked publicly about their reasoning for these choices?
As much as I really push for not needing a native solution for apps that can work well on the mobile browser, I've always felt the need to rely on a third party native GitHub client. Couldn't find any that were completely free and had everything that I needed, so I built GitPoint :)
This article was really the only mention I've heard about their mobile website but haven't heard anything about their reasoning either. Definitely curious as well.
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GitHub did have a mobile app. They decided to discontinue the development in favour for a mobile website.
Despite my blowhardedness, this is probably the right choice. The mobile web is getting better and better. Has GitHub ever talked publicly about their reasoning for these choices?
As much as I really push for not needing a native solution for apps that can work well on the mobile browser, I've always felt the need to rely on a third party native GitHub client. Couldn't find any that were completely free and had everything that I needed, so I built GitPoint :)
This article was really the only mention I've heard about their mobile website but haven't heard anything about their reasoning either. Definitely curious as well.