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npub19tru...vre3
npub19tru...vre3
I’m surprised I haven’t heard more responses from web developers about the change to Safari on iOS and iPadOS regarding web apps. Now every website can be a web app (saved to the Home Screen and opened as a stand-alone app) — not just sites that have been configured a certain way by the developers. It’s a big difference for users. Every site gets the same experience. No more mysterious sometimes-it-works-one-way, sometimes-another. Read more: image
Covid is highly contagious. It’s airborne. Floats in the air & hangs for hours, like measles. You can show up later & get infected. It’s incredibly damaging to the human body. Especially if you are infected over & over. The vaccines are amazing. And yet, they do not prevent vaccinated people from being infected & contagious. Many infectious people have no symptoms at all. The rapid home tests have an incredibly high rate of false negatives. A negative test does NOT mean you don't have it.
Web developers, do you test your sites in Safari Beta? (On a standalone machine, automated? On your Mac?) If not, why? Is it because installing the beta overrides regular Safari? If you could have Safari & Safari beta both at the same time, would you do so? What do you need? Why? Share details!
What do you need most from WebKit (the rendering engine for Safari that runs your HTML, CSS, JS, and more)? If you are making websites, what could we do in WebKit to make it easier for you to create fantastic experiences for your users?