Do you know what this even is? It’s not marginal at all. Check the comparisons of Tauri and Electron. And it does not use Chrome. Electron also doesn’t use Chrome.
Tauri is the exact same problem, just done a bit more cleanly.
The problem is the evolutionary dead end that - hopefully - is web framework based “desktop” apps. There is already a framework for desktop apps, and unless you’re still used to those, you wouldn’t notice just how slow any web framework is by comparison. It’s mostly the user interactions, that small but noticably delay on every interaction, every click, every type, everything. Funnily enough, my actual web browser (Firefox) shows one of the shortest delays when typing into web pages like this compared to all the “native apps” I got installed that are just web pages, too.
Tauri is an improvement. To the problem. It’s not a solution.
We just not there yet. Tauri tries to be Electron or React, where you write only once and use everywhere. This is very cost efficient. So even though it’s of course not perfect overall, but it is the perfect alternative, that brings web apps closer to native-like experience. Small but important step to greatness.
In the end the question is: Election or Tauri? And not a debate on whether web frameworks are bad etc.
I think most people are more upset about the engine being the only thing devs target now, similar to the old IE days, not as much on the chrome vs chromium aspect when it comes to this.
Wait until Tauri will gain popularity.
Yeah, then we can have marginally more responsive web apps.
Seriously though, web apps are usually just optimized like shit in addition to using chrome.
Do you know what this even is? It’s not marginal at all. Check the comparisons of Tauri and Electron. And it does not use Chrome. Electron also doesn’t use Chrome.
Tauri is the exact same problem, just done a bit more cleanly.
The problem is the evolutionary dead end that - hopefully - is web framework based “desktop” apps. There is already a framework for desktop apps, and unless you’re still used to those, you wouldn’t notice just how slow any web framework is by comparison. It’s mostly the user interactions, that small but noticably delay on every interaction, every click, every type, everything. Funnily enough, my actual web browser (Firefox) shows one of the shortest delays when typing into web pages like this compared to all the “native apps” I got installed that are just web pages, too.
Tauri is an improvement. To the problem. It’s not a solution.
We just not there yet. Tauri tries to be Electron or React, where you write only once and use everywhere. This is very cost efficient. So even though it’s of course not perfect overall, but it is the perfect alternative, that brings web apps closer to native-like experience. Small but important step to greatness.
In the end the question is: Election or Tauri? And not a debate on whether web frameworks are bad etc.
It’s chromium, which is basically chrome lol
Basically, but not basically. After all, Chromium is (F)OSS, and Chrome is proprietary.
I think most people are more upset about the engine being the only thing devs target now, similar to the old IE days, not as much on the chrome vs chromium aspect when it comes to this.
I was pleasantly surprised to find a tauri app in the wild at my work. Our time tracking software uses it, at least for the Linux version.