How would the PWA be any better than the actual native iOS app?
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The biggest reason is that PWA allows for web push notifications.
iOS is pretty strict when it comes to background apps keeping open connections, that's one of the reasons why there is no gotify app on iOS. They list the possible workaround with apple's APN service, but that would kind of defeat the purpose of selfhosting,
I'm afraid the biggest obstacle would be Apple's strict restrictions on background services. We cannot keep a persistent WebSocket connection in the background without abusing some APIs, which will absolutely disqualify the app from going onto the App Store and drain the battery significantly. Notifications could only be delivered through APN, which requires a developer account and a central server to manage notifications and send them to Apple before reaching the user, but this is not what gotify is designed for.
https://github.com/gotify/server/issues/87#issuecomment-457453135
//edit: If you check the ntfy docs, you'll see that instant delivery is not supported on iOS. So if you have uses that are time-sensitive, PWA with web push definitely has the advantage.
cool. can you give me some examples of how one might use this?
I have a backup script that runs every morning and I had it send a notification with ntfy on how many errors/warnings occurred. With backups it's important to actually know your backups are working.
I also have it report battery voltage and health every so often, which should hopefully give me advance warning of a spicy pillow in my laptop server.
Vikunja is a todo-app I enjoy quite a bit, but it only has email notifications. I made a script that runs every 15 minutes that reads all the tasks from the Vikunja API and sends me reminders or overdue tasks, and ntfy allows me to configure buttons on the notification which allows me to mark things done without having to open Vikunja.
It's a pretty good tool for anywhere you would want notifications.