Finally. This is my favorite side effect of the advent of foldables - more people seeing the big tablet landscape mode of apps, and thus the fact that so many apps are incompatible coming to light.
I don’t have an Android tablet, only iPad but I think this is a good move, do we know if Apple does the same?
I wonder why the tablet app ecosystem on Android is so poor? Could it be that the Google has spent the best part of the last decade firmly pretending that Android tablets don’t exist, and people should just buy a Chromebook? Maybe that might have something to do with it?
ChromeOS does benefit from android apps for tablets. Chromebooks are next gen android tablets.
I agree with the first statement and firmly disagree with the second. Chromebooks are not inherently tablets and they inherently do allow multiple windows open at once without split screen, something that you basically never see with the tablet computing paradigm.
I didn’t get you. Tablets allow only to split screen (except for some launchers that allow a kind of tiling with multiple apps) while Chromebooks allow standard windows like any X/wayland DE, plus they allow tiling similar to tablets.
Google says this every few years and never follows through.
They have no heart or soul, only brief flickers of “try” followed by “squirrel!”
The reasons for this are actually kinda fascinating (at least in a “root cause analysis of an engineering disaster” way).
The way performance evaluation works at Google very heavily takes into account what things your (and if you are a manager, your team) have delivered recently. Maintenance doesn’t really count, so if you want to get a good performance review (and promotions, not be first to go when it’s redundancy time etc) you have to be doing “new”. You can get away with ongoing evolutionary development of a thing if it’s a product or if it’s visible and important, but the unsexy, unglamorous things like looking after small corners of the developer ecosystem that (until very recently) weren’t strategic priorities is a very good way to kill your career.
So…. Instagram?
I wouldn’t be surprised if the unsaid part is that they’re focused more on productivity apps than social apps, but I could be wrong. Also wouldn’t be surprised if Instagram doesn’t care about getting downranked, given its brand and market awareness somewhat transcends the need to appear in top-apps lists.