You're viewing old version number 5. - Current version
Decline of the Mobile Web - April 2014
Some current and older stories:
- http://www.cdixon.org/2014/04/07/the-decline-of-the-mobile-web
- https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7548530
- http://serv.github.io/blog/2014/02/20/unfortunate-state-of-mobile-web/
- http://sealedabstract.com/rants/why-mobile-web-apps-are-slow/
I know it's not declining for me. I build my own web-based tools that function well on mobile devices:
- flip phone with Opera Mini browser
- iPhone
- Samsung S4
- HP tablet using WebOS
- iPad
- even the old Kindle
Maybe mobile web designers and developers need to simplify. But it depends upon the site's purpose too.
HN commenter:
Am I in the minority that I don't want an app for every. bloody. webpage. I visit?
I agree.
Another commenter:
I also don't want every mobile webpage I visit to use some slow janky JavaScript framework to emulate native app behavior either because in my experience the user experience for those are universally worse than just trying to be a relatively normal web page (perhaps with some media queries for image sizes, etc) and letting the mobile web browser do its thing.
I agree.
More stories:
http://daringfireball.net/2014/04/rethinking_what_we_mean_by_mobile_web
By JR
- 163 words
created:
- updated:
source
- versions
Related articles
Digital media and web services unbundling their products - Jun 04, 2014
Decline of the Mobile Web - April 2014 - Apr 10, 2014
Interesting design and function plans by the UK's The Times - Jul 30, 2016
Circa's mobile app versus the web and RSS - Jul 23, 2014
Web vs Native apps in 2013 and beyond - Oct 22, 2013
more >>