Is it technically possible to make a client version of this software?
So I'm looking for a new client, specifically mobile, that's FOSS, easy to use, allows for browsing communities on other instances easily (not just searching for instances, but actually viewing the list of instances, etc).
I'm a dev, so happy to put some legwork into it myself. So my question is - technically, is the UI tied to being run on an instance "directly", or could it be detached, electron- or atom-ified and put into an app?
I can do the work, but before starting I'd like to know :-)
Svelte (the JS framework I use) is releasing a really big v5 update which adds a lot of cool things and basically changes everything. It warrants a rewrite since I can make photon really fast with svelte 5, and the old codebase was limiting me in a lot of ways.
The biggest feature of this rewrite will be support for mastodon AND Lemmy, and thanks to the way I'm writing these adaptors, can support Sublinks, PixelFed, and almost anything if I write an adaptor for it.
I'm considering making this an entirely separate project (you might see it on my GitHub soon!) and maintaining photon separately, because I want to design this new one as an SPA for speed.
Firefox doesn't support PWA's, so that's a non-starter for me. I did try to get it to work, but I'd also want to tweak the UI scaling to make it a little more mobile-oriented - mainly scaling, and the sort of thing you can do with CSS and a few small tweaks. I suspect, as it's got tablet and desktop scaling already, that could be done by adding another render target.
True about FF desktop, but the mobile version does. Lack of PWA support in FF desktop has been an ongoing criticism of mine.
There's also Web App Manager that will let you approximate PWAs on FF desktop. It's shipped with Linux Mint, but I have it installed on both Debian and PopOS. I hate using it, but it's a decent option if you're opposed to having Chromium installed (I use Chromium only for desktop PWAs since I hate Electron).
I've tried most of them . The ones that work the way I want, especially for easy portable UI/UX design are closed source. Sadly, none of them have a nice workable UI for easy use, or if they do, they're really poor in another area.
This does all I want, with a nice UI and works nicely on mobile (with a few sizing tweaks).