

Jellyfin is a FOSS alternative to Plex. In simple terms, is a media streaming software. Download and host your media on one computer, stream it to other devices
Jellyfin is a FOSS alternative to Plex. In simple terms, is a media streaming software. Download and host your media on one computer, stream it to other devices
That one was illusive!
In a different comment I think I’ve found the games!
Thanks to the help of the other comments as well as some screenshot reverse image searching, I think we finally have a list!
Edit: Ope, I forgot to type “Royal” after persona
Ah I thought #3 was Hi-fi rush as well but this appears to be the right ID. I haven’t heard about this game, interesting!
Hi fi rush has skateboarding??? 👀
Taking a shit in the dark, I think 5 is Steamworld dig. I will not elaborate further as I have never played that game, truly a guess
Edit: I’m leaving the autocorrect in
Meh, number of games with Gold or Platinum Status on ProtonDB seems more significant IMO
PWAs (Progressive Web Apps) are their own categories of websites and they do indeed have the ability to behave like an actual app. They are much more than just a shortcut, which apple is reducing them to.
On android, my PWA that I developed for fun can go full screen and appear as though a browser isn’t wrapping the page, I can send notifications, I can access the microphone and camera, I can do nearly everything you could expect an app to do, I can support offline mode, I can store data locally, and I can manage my PWAs permissions as well as uninstall my app at an OS level. My entire family uses my PWA, and they see it as an app.
Are there some things native apps can do that PWAs can’t? Absolutely, but that is not the point. PWAs are an open and clearly defined technology to the web. Windows supports them as well.
Apple is refusing to accept that though. They are removing notifications, badges, etc, and reducing them to what you have described, just a shortcut to a Safari window. They are citing security concerns even though other operating systems are able to implement security around them just fine.
The real issue is Apple wants more control over how you use your device and is acting against the consumer.