3 comments

  • madibo31568 minutes ago
    This is all very deep in the weeds, biased and opinionated, so it&#x27;s hard for me to draw my own conclusion with all the missing facts that may or may not exist from Apple&#x27;s side. What I will say is that it&#x27;s very funny that Apple, on all of its browsers, does not currently support the <i>squircle</i> corner shape—a piece of flair that is iconically Apple.
  • conartist611 minutes ago
    Yow! Well said.
  • tgv1 hour ago
    If not all browsers support a feature, don&#x27;t use it, or make it optional. It&#x27;s not that hard. If you can&#x27;t figure it out, ask your LLM.
    • chowells33 minutes ago
      The article is about how Apple is underdelivering in browser features and compatibility while pretending they aren&#x27;t. It&#x27;s about Apple. Apple. The ones responsible for a great many features not being supported in all browsers.<p>What does a web dev have to do with Apple&#x27;s choice? How do you improve Safari by not using features it doesn&#x27;t support? What does your comment have to do with the argument the article is making?
    • dTal13 minutes ago
      You appear to be arguing that we shouldn&#x27;t care that Apple provides a consistently bad experience and locks their users into it, because web developers can level the field by degrading everyone else&#x27;s experience too. There&#x27;s a nice couple paragraphs in the article that explain why we should in fact care, and you don&#x27;t seem to have addressed them, so let me reproduce them for you in case you missed them. (also, you might not be aware that &quot;it&#x27;s not that hard, ask your LLM&quot; comes across as incredibly rude and snarky.):<p>These large, persistent gaps matter to the mobile and web ecosystems because Apple is unique in denying access to more capable, less-buggy engines and actively erecting unlawful barriers to choice when forced by legislation to enable it. This is accomplished through eye-watering budgets for legal shenanigans, direct lobbying, and well-heeled astroturf front groups to maintain a capability gap between web and native.4<p>That chasm is instrumental in trapping users and developers in the extractive vice of Cupertino&#x27;s App Store. A persistent, material gap in capabilities creates a perception of the web being less-than; a budget option for the unserious. Should users choose more capable, more private, less buggy browsers for a larger share of their computing needs, Apple might lose the leverage that enables it to extract rents.
    • miranaproarrow41 minutes ago
      [dead]