![]() (You can manually set it in preferences if you need.) It’s just a super clever way to make new web apps, and it’s much simpler than other methods. ![]() It also does some very neat things with the icons. First, it automatically sets the icon to something appropriate for each app, often a high-resolution favicon. For certain apps, it can automatically add badges for unread messages. Google Calendar gets switched to today’s date. “No plugins, no bundled browser renderer, no javascript bridges, no bookmark background syncing.” If you like, you can set the app’s icon to be a live look at a custom cutout of the webpage itself (e.g., if you keep track of a stock or web traffic or something, that number can be visible in your dock).įlotato windows are deliberately chrome-less - and I mean that in both the literal and metaphorical ways. Even the little stoplight buttons are hidden by default. It makes the apps look like they’re floating (hence the name). ![]() You can set it to ask for desktop or mobile versions of a web app, which allows you to have really tiny, narrow windows for certain apps if you like. ![]() Metaphorically, Flotato uses the Mac’s native WebKit engine, so, in theory, it should be much less onerous on your processor and RAM than Electron apps or, in some cases, Chrome tabs. There are a few extra software tricks on top of just using the OS’s rendering engine, but it’s still much lighter than Electron. ![]()
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