It’s my, general, understanding that most people connect to the Internet through mobile apps.

If this is the case, then why have apps such as Remmel, Lemmur and jerboa taken a back seat?

IMHO, it would be a mistake to market Lemmy without these mobile apps functioning properly.

I have forked the three aforementioned mobile apps here and will try to ‘drum up’ support from developers wherever I can find them.

Please, if you don’t feel comfortable talking to me about this here, then send me a private message. Thank you.

  • I made jerboa like a month ago, and I’m not an android dev; I had to learn android programming from scratch.

    Its not that any of these mobile apps have taken a back seat; I wouldn’t have made making a native android one a priority if I didn’t think mobile apps are important.

    The issue is that even though all of these are open source projects, very few experienced coders contribute to them, so I welcome your effort to find more development help. All of the ppl currently working on lemmy, its web app, and its mobile apps are spread very thin.

    Even with that said, I’m very proud of all the work put in by these devs, and I have no doubt they will continue to improve their apps, but on their own schedule. If you want things done faster, the codebase is right there.

  • It’s my, general, understanding that most people connect to the Internet through mobile apps.

    Certainly, a lot of people use mobile apps.

    If this is the case, then why have apps such as Remmel, Lemmur and jerboa taken a back seat?

    In what way have they “taken a back seat?” Taken a back seat to what?

    They seem to be there for anyone who wants to use them, and look like they’re actively maintained.

    IMHO, it would be a mistake to market Lemmy without these mobile apps functioning properly.

    I don’t believe those client apps are built by the same folks as Lemmy, therefore whether they “function properly” is purely a concern for their developers and users.

    Lemmy is non-commercial and as such “the market” doesn’t work in the same way as an integrated product like Instagram, Twitter, etc.

    • In what way have they “taken a back seat?” Taken a back seat to what?

      Taken a back seat to browser development.

      …and look like they’re actively maintained.

      Not as actively as the browser development.

      I don’t believe those client apps are built by the same folks as Lemmy…

      They aren’t except for ‘jerboa’.

      …therefore whether they “function properly” is purely a concern for their developers and users.

      It’s a concern because most users connect to the Internet through mobile apps.

      Lemmy is non-commercial and as such “the market” doesn’t work in the same way as an integrated product like Instagram, Twitter, etc.

      I’m not addressing the differing world market systems. I’m addressing how most people connect to the Internet.

      • In what way have they “taken a back seat?” Taken a back seat to what?
        

        Taken a back seat to browser development.

        And in what way does this manifest? They lack features that the web UI has? Why are you bringing it up here instead of filing tickets with mobile apps?

        It seems silly to say they’ve “taken a back seat” when they’re entirely different pieces of software written by different individuals. It’s like saying that Chrome development is taking a back seat to DuckDuckGo. They’re different things entirely.

        I don’t believe those client apps are built by the same folks as Lemmy…
        

        They aren’t except for ‘jerboa’.

        It’s a side project by a Lemmy developer, not an official part of Lemmy.

        …therefore whether they “function properly” is purely a concern for their developers and users.
        

        It’s a concern because most users connect to the Internet through mobile apps.

        Lemmy is non-commercial and as such “the market” doesn’t work in the same way as an integrated product like Instagram, Twitter, etc.
        

        I’m not addressing the differing world market systems. I’m addressing how most people connect to the Internet.

        You seem to have confused and incorrect ideas about how the internet works.