rgadellaa’s avatarrgadellaa’s Twitter Archive—№ 9,447

                                1. Reading through the comments, I noticed certain themes / lines of thought that keep popping up: - 3rd party browsers on iOS will allow Chrome to become dominant - Related: Web devs just want to build and test against one browser - OWA is pushing the Chrome agenda 🧵👇 x.com/MacRumors/status/1498998983796002818
                              1. …in reply to @RGadellaa
                                (Disclaimer: I've been involved with Open Web Advocacy (OWA) group for a little while, my opinion and especially wording below is my own but, in large, it should mostly cover the OWA standpoint regarding these matters) TL;DR: Read my full reply here: forums.macrumors.com/threads/web-developers-form-advocacy-group-to-allow-other-browser-engines-on-ios.2336367/page-5#post-30895966 2/n
                            1. …in reply to @RGadellaa
                              Let's tackle this first: - Allowing 3rd party browsers on iOS will allow Chrome to become dominant - Or: Apple is preventing a browser engine monoculture - Related: Web developers just want to build and test their sites for one browser 3/n
                          1. …in reply to @RGadellaa
                            First of all: none of these arguments are made by Apple (afaik?) as to why they only allow WebKit-based browsers on iOS. They point to privacy and security as the primary reason. 4/n
                        1. …in reply to @RGadellaa
                          Seeing how WebKit security bugs take the longest (and a full OS update) to fix when compared to other browsers - and that these bugs affect every single iOS user, no matter which "browser" they use - this argument can be quite easily dismissed. googleprojectzero.blogspot.com/2022/02/a-walk-through-project-zero-metrics.html 5/n
                          oh my god twitter doesn’t include alt text from images in their API
                      1. …in reply to @RGadellaa
                    1. …in reply to @RGadellaa
                      Apple is certainly not the steward of browser competition and diversity (that's Mozilla's job ;)). Apple is, in fact, quite the opposite. 7/n
                  1. …in reply to @RGadellaa
                    Apple enforces a browser monoculture on an entire platform that has up to 50% mobile market share in most western countries! No other major general computing device prohibits 3rd party browser engines. 8/n
                1. …in reply to @RGadellaa
                  Meanwhile, Apple, the world's richest company, seems to starve the WebKit team from resources needed to compete (or even keep up) whether it comes to security fixes or APIs. 9/n
                  oh my god twitter doesn’t include alt text from images in their APIoh my god twitter doesn’t include alt text from images in their API
              1. …in reply to @RGadellaa
            1. …in reply to @RGadellaa
              The OWA's hope is that allowing competition will create incentive for Apple to actually compete and invest in WebKit so users want to keep using it even if there are alternatives and developers want to support it because it's a great browser. 11/n
          1. …in reply to @RGadellaa
            Many macOS users use Safari (power of the default + it's actually a nice browser - from a user perspective, at least). Safari has unique selling points. And again, it's the default. 12/n
        1. …in reply to @RGadellaa
          The OWA actually wants *more* browsers on iOS like we have on every other general computing device, not less. 13/n
      1. …in reply to @RGadellaa
        Regarding developers and supporting multiple browser engines: supporting WebKit is quite a pain right now. You have to own a mac and at least one iDevice to debug any of the many bugs Safari will throw your way. 14/n
    1. …in reply to @RGadellaa
      Just look at this graph and you can probably tell which browser causes the most issues when building a site: 15/n
      oh my god twitter doesn’t include alt text from images in their API
  1. …in reply to @RGadellaa
    Ugh the image is missing the explainer of what you're looking at: "Number of tests which fail in exactly one browser" In other words: lower is better :) #TweetsButEditable
    oh my god twitter doesn’t include alt text from images in their API