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Element is reliant on web technologies and uses Electron for bundling the app for Windows, macOS and Linux. The Android and iOS clients are developed and distributed with their respective platform tools. On Android the app is available both in the Google Play Store [29] and the free-software only F-Droid [30] Archives
This is a list of application software written using the Electron software framework to provide the graphical user interface. List. 1Password; Atom [1] (discontinued)
Joplin is a free and open-source desktop and mobile note-taking and to-do list application written for Unix-like (including macOS and Linux) and Microsoft Windows operating systems, as well as iOS, Android, and Linux/Windows terminals, [2] written in JavaScript. The desktop app is made using Electron, while the mobile app uses React Native.
Electron applications include a "main" process and several "renderer" processes. The main process runs the logic for the application (e.g., menus, shell commands, lifecycle events), and can then launch multiple renderer processes by instantiating an instance of the BrowserWindow class, which loads a window that appears on the screen by ...
Here is when Electron enters the picture to save the day. Electron allows you to build desktop applications using HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. There are many arguments on the internet against ...
Tauri is an open-source software framework designed to create cross-platform desktop and mobile applications on Linux, macOS, Windows, Android and iOS using a web frontend. The framework functions with a Rust back-end and a JavaScript front-end [1] that runs on local WebView libraries using rendering libraries like Tao and Wry.
Obsidian is built on the cross-platform Electron framework, allowing for the application to run on desktop operating systems like Windows, Linux, and macOS. A special version is also available for mobile operating systems such as Android and iOS. [16] A forum and Discord server are hosted by the developers. [17] [10]
Pinger, Inc. is a US telecom provider for free texts, pictures, calls, and voicemails. [1] Pinger was founded in 2005 by former Palm, Inc. managers Greg Woock (CEO of Pinger, Inc) and Joe Sipher.