Spyke

IIRC extensions are sadly not a part of stable Gnome Web yet.

9

When I last tried it (around the time that article was posted, could've improved since), you needed to mess with gconf to enable the feature, which was for good reason because the compatibility was abysmal (ublock origin did not work and neither did dark reader or violentmonkey or really any extension I wanted to use).

1
lemmy.nowsci.com

What browser engine does it use? And what happens if links are clicked? Can we specify which browser and profile is opened?

22

Which allows you to freely choose any of your installed browsers, the menu category to place it under, the icon and any optional extra parameters.

It's actually amazing, I use this to separate logins and addons for online services I use often!

1
lemmy.ml

Remember Firefox’s SSB that got removed before anyone knew about it since no one was using it, since it was behind a about:config flag, that users didn’t know about so they didn’t use it so Fx removed it? Weird-ass circular logic from Mozilla. I would have loved that PWA feature.

19
Karnareply
lemmy.ml

Currently I'm using ungoogled-chromium on Linux just for PWA because of this decision made by Mozilla 😔

3

Is this any different from creating an icon which opens the website in a browser?

14
8Bitz0reply
discuss.tchncs.de

Nativefier was great. I recall that project struggling at the end really needing funding.

1
lemmyvorereply
feddit.nl

It's Prism still around? I used it back in the day but I thought it had been discontinued.

1

Nah, it is disconinued since many years, I thought it was kinda neat at first, but realized it would be faster to just use the full firefox browser instead.

2
lemm.ee

Cool. I currently use Ferdium, but this seems like a much more lightweight alternative as it doesn't ship its own Electron or whatever.

5

I was thinking exactly that yesterday, I looked for a way to have few web apps without using ferdium.

2

This is really cool, it would be nice to have some quick options like start minimized or minimize to tray.

4
db2
lemmy.world

Already have one, it's called a browser.

-1

Pretty much. Why "reinvent the wheel" if it does absolutely nothing that excels what a "normal browser" does?

2

You reached the end

I made an app to install websites as desktop applications on Linux | Spyke