Difference between revisions of "1174: App"

Explain xkcd: It's 'cause you're dumb.
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m (Explanation: cosmetic change: removed the unwanted line breaks in source text, and removed useless nowiki tag at the end (wtf happened here?))
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==Explanation==
 
==Explanation==
This comic is about how web sites design an "app" to front their website pages.  Site typically justify the app existance with that it is  
+
This comic is about how web sites design an "app" to front their website pages.  Site typically justify the app existance with that it is optimized for viewing from mobile devices, while in fact this is false since you cannot zoom or change the text size in most of these apps.  Regardless of that the sizes still try to prompt you install their app on every vists to their site from a mobile device.
optimized for viewing from mobile devices, while in fact this is false since you cannot zoom or change the text size in most of these apps.  Regardless of that the sizes still try to prompt you install their app on every vists to their site from a mobile device.
 
  
Usually, the mobile version of the web page is made separately
+
Usually, the mobile version of the web page is made separately from the regular version, so it's often incomplete. The app used to view it has also some other serious usability problems (e.g. it can't be zoomed), so it's usually better to just view the regular version of the web site with a regular browser even when accessing the web from a mobile device.
from the regular version, so it's
 
often incomplete.
 
The app used to view it has also some
 
other serious usability problems (e.g. it can't be zoomed),
 
so it's usually better to just view the regular version
 
of the web site with a regular browser even when accessing
 
the web from a mobile device.
 
  
In the comic, a mobile device user is trying to do just that:
+
In the comic, a mobile device user is trying to do just that: visit the regular version of web page through a regular browser. However, the site keeps on insisting that the user really should "download our app to visit an incomplete version of our website
visit the regular version of web page through a regular browser.
+
where you can't zoom". If the user chooses "no", it isn't really a "no", but rather a "no, but ask me again every time"; so this pop-up is going to get really annoying very soon.
However, the site keeps on insisting that the user
 
really should "download our app to visit
 
an incomplete version of our website
 
where you can't zoom".
 
If the user chooses "no", it isn't really a "no", but rather a
 
"no, but ask me again every time"; so this pop-up is going
 
to get really annoying very soon.
 
  
In the title text, there's a reference to yet another very serious
+
In the title text, there's a reference to yet another very serious usability problem of the mobile version of web pages: the only page one can really see is the home page, and whenever the user tries to get anywhere else in the site, the server loses track of the navigation and sends the user back to the home page to start over again. This is the same effect described in [[869: Server Attention Span|comic 869]].
usability problem of the mobile version of web pages:
 
the only page one can really see is the home page,
 
and whenever the user tries to get anywhere else in the site,
 
the server loses track of the navigation and sends the user
 
back to the home page to start over again.
 
This is the same effect described in
 
[[869: Server Attention Span|comic 869]]<nowiki />.
 
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==

Revision as of 12:42, 15 February 2013

App
If I click 'no', I've probably given up on everything, so don't bother taking me to the page I was trying to go to. Just drop me on the homepage. Thanks.
Title text: If I click 'no', I've probably given up on everything, so don't bother taking me to the page I was trying to go to. Just drop me on the homepage. Thanks.

Explanation

This comic is about how web sites design an "app" to front their website pages. Site typically justify the app existance with that it is optimized for viewing from mobile devices, while in fact this is false since you cannot zoom or change the text size in most of these apps. Regardless of that the sizes still try to prompt you install their app on every vists to their site from a mobile device.

Usually, the mobile version of the web page is made separately from the regular version, so it's often incomplete. The app used to view it has also some other serious usability problems (e.g. it can't be zoomed), so it's usually better to just view the regular version of the web site with a regular browser even when accessing the web from a mobile device.

In the comic, a mobile device user is trying to do just that: visit the regular version of web page through a regular browser. However, the site keeps on insisting that the user really should "download our app to visit an incomplete version of our website where you can't zoom". If the user chooses "no", it isn't really a "no", but rather a "no, but ask me again every time"; so this pop-up is going to get really annoying very soon.

In the title text, there's a reference to yet another very serious usability problem of the mobile version of web pages: the only page one can really see is the home page, and whenever the user tries to get anywhere else in the site, the server loses track of the navigation and sends the user back to the home page to start over again. This is the same effect described in comic 869.

Transcript

[a popup window on top of a webpage displayed in a smartphone browser]
Want to visit an incomplete version of our website where you can’t zoom?
Download our app!
[OK] [No, but ask me again every time]


comment.png add a comment! ⋅ comment.png add a topic (use sparingly)! ⋅ Icons-mini-action refresh blue.gif refresh comments!

Discussion

Interestingly, Scott Hanselman just made a blog post about this very issue. Note how the page in its entirety was downloaded using his mobile data plan, but it's still in no way viewable. --Buggz (talk) 08:27, 15 February 2013 (UTC)

By "in no way viewable" you mean mobile browsers don't support editing page's DOM like Chrome does out of the box and Firefox do with FireBug extension? (Try pressing F12). Not to speaking about the javascript-in-location-bar tricks someone already started posting on the blog post you mentioned. -- Hkmaly (talk) 09:29, 15 February 2013 (UTC)
I was talking about how the website is done by design. Since the whole page is downloaded you can of course start "hacking" your way through to the content, but that's besides the point. --Buggz (talk) 11:00, 15 February 2013 (UTC)
It may be seen as hacking now. But removing ads from websites was also seen as hacking until ad blockers becamed fully automated and popular. If those overlays becomes anoying enough, someone will code extension to get rid of them. -- Hkmaly (talk) 09:35, 18 February 2013 (UTC)
Most mobile browsers don't support extensions, but you COULD disable JavaScript before viewing the page then re enabling it after.

141.101.98.240 07:57, 4 November 2013 (UTC)


prompting mobile views = prompting people viewing the website from a mobile browser ("mobile views" is web designer terminology, not mainstream speech) -- 195.130.121.48 (talk) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)

Right, let's reword that (which you can do yourself, by the way, but I'll admit that from the main page it's not obvious for a newcomer). - Cos (talk) 11:45, 15 February 2013 (UTC)
Seems like Spongebog did actually. - Cos (talk) 11:49, 15 February 2013 (UTC)

Chainsaw Suit also made almost the same joke: http://chainsawsuit.com/2013/01/23/view-the-desktop-version-of-this-site/

It's been moved here: https://chainsawsuit.krisstraub.com/20130123.shtml Schmurr (talk) 19:58, 10 February 2023 (UTC)

It reminds me very much of the way tapatalk-enabled forums act. They keep prompting you to use the app, which - if you have the app - will not open the page you were on.

Related, I stopped using the BBC News App because part way through last year it insisted I use an account to access it (I now just view the BBC website). The BBC Weather App is now also starting to tell me that I will need an account (the same account, that I just don't feel like getting), so no doubt I will keep a tab open in my mobile browser for that, too, at some point.
I've been using the News/Weather Apps, on successive devices, for maybe a decade and they have worked perfectly well without needing any account-linking... Though the Weather App started to lose the ability to remember more than five locations at a time, without the login, which is a purely a designed-in reduction of functionality that has no technical necessity other than becoming more PesterWare to promote... something to do with branding/enhanced exploitation of user-profiles? Which I'm happy enough to do pasively (device-id, usual stuff) but I'll be darned if I'll actively help them. 172.69.79.185 21:16, 10 February 2023 (UTC)


What can we learn from this?

I've learned that there are a billion things in the world that still need to be improved and sometimes if you seeking inspirations for new inventions they sometimes stare you right in the face (Thank you Mr. XKCD). Software engineers among us, lets help them improve their designs and avoid their mistakes ok? - e-inspired 24.51.197.187 19:17, 27 February 2013 (UTC)

I have been heavily influenced by Randall's view on the browser vs mobile dichotomy, (https://xkcd.com/1367/ this being his best showerthought) but I have come to realize that native apps are a genuinely better product than any webpage can be. The fact that apps don't have zoom is a feature, who wants to zoom to a picture, then pan to a scroll bar to move down and then go back to the picture column. Mobile has caught up in terms of UX and product quality, the reason Randall was initially skeptical is because he was born and raised in an internet generation where the best products and users had keyboards and browsers.-- Tomás 198.41.231.135 00:16, 13 October 2019 (UTC)
Well, this comic came out 6 years ago, when the apps were not necesarily providing a better UI/UX, and phone screens were often so small, that only a limited number of characters would be possible to display in a size where they can be read, so zooming in and out to read text was often necessary. --Lupo (talk) 06:30, 14 October 2019 (UTC)