Serverpod reposted this
Native app development is dying. ☠️ Here is what you need to do to stay relevant as a developer in the future. 🦄
First .Net Cross platform, then React Native, and now Flutter. Yet, it’s still here and thriving. Cross-platform tools are great, but they can’t match the performance and deep platform integration that native development offers. It's here to stay.
Did you forget the year we're in right now? It's 2024 and Flutter has been out and stable for a long time now. Do you think this question really as simple as you're portraying it to be? Click-bait.
Yeah, exactly. Thats why Apple is investing in SwiftUI so heavily. So the Flutter can be it’s gravedigger 🤡
You forgot to mention React Native, which has much better community support as well
Well if this isn’t click bait BS, I’m not sure what is 😂
I heard that so many times before yet we still here
Bullshit Performance: Optimized for iOS and Android, offering better speed and smoother animations. Latest Features: Instant access to new APIs and features from Apple and Google. Security: Deeper OS integration for stronger security measures. User Experience: More seamless, intuitive, and natural design. Scalability: Easier to scale and maintain with platform-specific languages.
One of Flutter's key advantages is its ability to deliver truly native apps across multiple platforms. By using its own rendering engine, which compiles into native code for both iOS and Android, Web, MacOS, Window & Linux. This eliminates the performance overhead and limitations often associated with web-based frameworks like React Native. Not saying Flutter has its own limitations.
So many triggered. 😂 Native will be around guys. Flutter and RN will thrive. Cheers.
Software Engineer | Web & Mobile Developer | Flutter | React, Next.js, Node.js | Blockchain and AI Enthusiast | | AWS Cloud Architect | Technical Writer
2moWell said but I don't think native is dying rather it is growing. cross-platform development is ideal for startups who want to get the ball running but rather than that all big companies still prefer native to cross-platform.