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100% Positive

Analyzed from 198 words in the discussion.

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#apps#store#macos#mostly#user#app#native#difference#got#read

Discussion (14 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

regecks35 minutes ago
Damn. The "iPhone last setup or erased on ..." is really nasty. What can a user really do about that? I feel like this should be fudged somehow by the OS.
matthewfcarlson22 minutes ago
Is the threat model tracking across multiple apps to correlate what you're doing? In that case, a single app wouldn't show you the fudging.
ChrisMarshallNY25 minutes ago
It's likely to be trolled by the WPA folks, who will insist that WPAs are just as insecure as native apps, so there's no difference ...

But very cool.

njsubedi3 minutes ago
You mean PWA?
ChrisMarshallNY2 minutes ago
Yes. Got my ps and ws mixed up. I was just reading about the Mt. Rushmore project (impressive).
paulirishabout 2 hours ago
Would love this for MacOS as well.
weikjuabout 2 hours ago
Fortunately, if you read the README (and decide to go past the “this was mostly built by AI” part,

> Loupe also builds for macOS. The Mac version is mostly complete, but a few things still need work before it's polished.

heavensteeth4 minutes ago
> and decide to go past the “this was mostly built by AI” part

I got that feeling just seeing the title use "native" as a synonym of "not a website".

bethekidyouwantabout 2 hours ago
What “apps” do you use on a mac?
VertanaNinjaiabout 1 hour ago
Probably a ton since macOS apps are literally distributed as .app bundles.
winstonwinston35 minutes ago
Though there is a difference what store apps and non-store apps can do. I think is about store apps which are “sandboxed” and have to use public api to request then access information which non-store apps can access without.
internet2000about 1 hour ago
Google Chrome, VS Code, among others
bethekidyouwant20 minutes ago
Well “they” can technically “read” anything your user can.