Comment by jonplackett
2 months ago
You have to wonder about the motivations of the company making the browser that makes it impossible to disable some of these things, and therefore makes real apps so much superior (like swipe to go back on safari - I have never ever swiped back intentionally in over 100000 swipe backs).
“I have never wanted to type the letter ‘e’ in any of the 100,000 times I hit the ‘e’ key on the keyboard; it’s always felt suspicious to me why keyboards even have an ‘e’ key which can’t be disabled” said the perfectly normal hacker news commenter.
> I have never ever swiped back intentionally in over 100000 swipe backs
Real question here, what are you trying to do when you "swipe back"?
Touching something on the left side, like a link, and let my finger touch the glass a tiny bit too long while pulling the finger back. Unwanted swiping happens to me all the time in all directions - may the developers use a touch screen for everything forever!
This swipe thing violates one of the most basic ux principles by making a destructive action easily triggered by accident.
Dating apps.
By instinct I swipe back like I am in Safari, and that does something else in those.
Swipe UP