only downside is that if you choose to install fire multiple instances the admins need to have customized their setting because Lemmy defaults to always be called Lemmy
If you meant instance admins, is there any particular customization? Mine has a unique name but the PWA still created the launcher as "Lemmy"
I'm assuming that's coming from a static value in the served manifest.json but I haven't really investigated or thought about the launcher name until you mentioned it.
I'm not an admin so i don't know where it's coming from but i know i tried making a PWA from Lemmy-ml, Lemmy-one and beehaw and they all had the same icon and same name (Lemmy)
be great if FF just let me customize my own icon myself but they don't.
When I try it with Firefox (ver. 113.2.0, on Android 13 Pixel 6) I can't get my keyboard to work? If I pull up lemmy.ml on the FireFox browser, and go to create a post, I can type all day long and be fine. When I use the "Install to..." To put the page on my home screen like an app, then try and create a post my keyboard flickers on screen for a second and disappears. No clue why.
It does this with other website-as-an-app things (I don't know what to actually call them) too, not just Lemmy.
I'm pretty sure the name is "progressive web app" or PWA.
i wonder if you chosen keyboard could be the problem? I'm using the FF Android on a pixel 6 myself right now as i type this. i think i use the Google keyboard
PWAs are nice but don't let that distract from the fact that they're written in JS which runs on VMs, just like Java on Android. Depending on the specifics one or the other could be more efficient. Generally I'd bet on Android Java apps taking the resource victory.
I'm not sure, but since Apple doesn't allow third party browsers (you can download Chrome, but it still uses Safari's engine for example) it really doesn't matter.
Even if you could do it on another browser it wouldn't change anything. You'll just get an icon that launches a website with no browser UI. Since all browser apps use the Safari backend, it's a moot point.
Wefwef is installed in the same way as this, and Memmy is Android/iOS cross-platform, so thanks to network effect it moves forward very quickly. The experience is amazing, I feel like I’m using the Apollo app. It feels truly native, unlike most React Native apps.