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Discussion on: Safari is the New Internet Explorer

 
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Meghan (she/her) • Edited

On Windows, no. On your Galaxy, perhaps.

To clarify, I was more talking about WebKit than particularly Safari. To go on a bit of a tangent and take the current goal of PWAs and The Extensible Web to one natural conclusion is to almost completely get rid of the need of "native" applications. In this world, when a company, say Apple, wants to introduce a new platform on top of the ecosystem they've already created with iOS and macOS, such as tvOS, the idea is that they (Apple) would make the TV, put WebKit on it, and then all their users would have access to all the great web apps we know and love. At the same time I only agree with this idea in a world where (whatever company) makes the browser good (supports Web App Manifest, Service Worker, HTML5+, etc) and that a lack in engineering to bring these features to said engine would cause users to be able to switch.

Hardware is already approaching a point where it's easily faster than we are, and you almost have to try and make something non-performant. So my idea with that sentiment is that eventually all you would be buying is presentation in which case (my big jump) don't like the browser, buy something else.

Hope this helped clarify a bit :)